Nude. Neon lights and a lightbox sculpture create an even light that confuses our sense of time or place. Seven life-sized nude figures inhabit the space, in peaceful repose, informally posed on the floor. The sections of each figure are made of different earth colors, a mixture of wax and earth pigments.
The Museum of Cycladic Art is pleased to announce an exhibition by the Swiss artist Ugo Rondinone, under the title nude. The exhibition is a new site specific installation. Rondinone intervened and changed everything about the space, the floor, the light and the colours of the walls and ceiling to create his characteristically otherworld, dreamlike environment. A special sculpture wall was installed in the first room to make sure this world is separated from everyday life. Neon lights and a lightbox sculpture create an even light that confuses our sense of time or place. Seven life-sized nude figures inhabit the space, in peaceful repose, informally posed on the floor. Jointed like store-window mannequins, the figures are exquisitely detailed, as they are cast in wax directly from the human body. The sections of each figure are made of different earth colors, a mixture of wax and earth pigments. Naked and vulnerable, they seem to be resting after having performed. Rondinone himself says he chose dancers at the peak of their youth, bodies full of energy to accentuate the contradiction with their state of slumber. Why are they resting? From what? Maybe from life? Did they ever have their own life? In the context of the Museum of Cycladic Art, where the figurines of the permanent collection, dating from 3000BC, remain hermetically closed, resting in enigmatic serenity, Rondinone’s resting figures invite the viewer to reflect on the evolution of the figuration through the centuries but also on how humanity deals with existential question through time
A few words on the artist
Ugo Rondinone has earned international attention for his poetic, evocative work across a diverse range of mediums, including painting, drawing, photography, video, installation, and sculpture. Rondinone tends to work in series, selecting a medium and subject that he then explores in multiple variations. He combines diverse references, ranging from pop elements in his stripe paintings and 60s psychedelia in his trance-inducing target paintings, to melancholic Romanticism in his India ink landscapes. His enigmatic dreamlike installations of ghostly casts of olive trees, his oversized versions of Chinese scholar rocks and suspended large wax pigment light bulbs combine memory and fantasy in creating dreamlike, melancholic installations. Rondinone often uses the human figure in his work in order to explore the processes of how cultural meaning is created and circulated through the language of figuration. His unsettling installations, invite the viewer to reflect on the transience of human life. Some of the important such series are his photographic self-portraits "I Don't Live Here Anymore" and his reclining odalisque-clowns series "If There Were Anywhere But Desert". SUNRISE. east. and MOONRISE. east., Rondinone’s iconic totem-like figures, poetic and humorous metaphors for the cyclic nature of time, have been installed all over the world, from the Jardin des Tuileries in Paris, 2009 to the Yokohama Triennale in Japan this summer 2011. One of the figures was exhibited in the garden of the Cycladic museum in 2007. His characteristic large rainbow signs mounted on buildings are just as enigmatically captivating. Phrases such as “Cry Me A River” or “Our Magic Hour”, taken from pop songs or everyday exclamations, seem to become beacons of hope. “Hell Yes!” was a particularly powerful installation on the façade of the New Museum, a dramatically positive affirmation at post 9/11 New York City. Rondinone has had major solo exhibitions at Aargauer Kunsthaus in Aarau, Switzerland (2010), Museo de Arte Contemporéneo de Castilla y León, Spain (2009), at Whitechapel Gallery in London (2006), Le Consortium, Dijon (2004), Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris and Museum of Contemporary Art in Sydney (2003), Kunsthalle Wien, Vienna (2002), P.S.1, Long Island City, New York (2000), at Kunsthaus Glarus and Galerie für zeitgenössische Kunst in Leipzig (1999). In 2007 he represented Switzerland in the 52nd Venice Biennial (with Urs Fischer) and curated “The Third Mind” at Palais de Tokyo in Paris. Rondinone’s neon sculpture "Hell,Yes!" (2001) was installed on the New Museum’s Bowery building façade from its opening in 2007 through 2010. Ugo Rondinone showed at the Yokohama Triennale 2011, Japan (August 2011-November 2011). His neon sculpture "Our Magic Hour" installed on the museum’s roof and acting as the exhibition’s overall title and his twelve masks MOONRISE. east. were shown on the forecourt of the Yokohama Museum of Art. Ugo Rondinone was born in 1964 in Brunnen, Switzerland to Italian parents and is based in New York.
Wednesday 23.05.2012
Paolo Colombo - Ugo Rondinone
As part of Ugo Rondinone’s exhibition at the Museum of Cycladic Art, we invite you to join us in a conversation between the artist and art-historian, Paolo Colombo.
The talk will be held in English.
Admission: €10, MCA friends, CSC Members: €8
(4 Neofytou Douka str., New Auditorium)
Buy your tickets at the Museum entrance.
Press contact:
Alexia Vasilikou, Head of Press Office T: +30 210 7228321 E: avasilikou@cycladic.gr
Nicholas P. Goulandris Foundation – Museum of Cycladic Art
4, Neophytou Douka str. Athens 106 74
Opening hours Print page
Monday - Wednesday - Friday - Saturday: 10:00 - 17:00
Thursday: 10:00 - 20:00
Sunday: 11:00 - 17:00
Tuesday closed
Standard entrance fee € 7
Reduced entrance fees
- seniors (over 65) € 3,5
- students, 19-26 years old € 3,5
- groups of 15 or more € 5 (each)
Monday entrance fee € 3,5
Free admission kids and young persons under 18