LACMA's Communications Department
Uta Barth
Lecia Dole-Recio
Shannon Ebner
Harold Edgerton
Buckminster Fuller
Barbara Kasten
Jim Lambie
Steve McQueen
Yunhee Min
Gabriel Orozco
Ed Ruscha
Robert Smithson
Frances Stark
James Welling
Barbara Kasten
David Benjamin Sherry
Sheila Pinkel
Rita Gonzalez
Contemporary Art from the Collection. The 39 artists comprising Lost Line span various disciplines, generations, artistic movements, and geographies with works by Uta Barth, Lecia Dole-Recio, Shannon Ebner, Harold Edgerton, Buckminster Fuller, Barbara Kasten, Jim Lambie, Steve McQueen, Yunhee Min, Gabriel Orozco and more.
The Los Angeles County Museum of Art
(LACMA) presents Lost Line: Contemporary Art from the Collection,
featuring more than seventy-five artworks that consider notions of
mapping, topography and monumentality as central themes. On view in BCAM
November 25, 2012-February 24, 2013, the exhibition includes large-scale
sculpture and painting installations, film, photography, and works on
paper by a range of artists, architects, and scientists.
Lost Line is the
second large-scale exhibition of works from LACMA’s contemporary holdings
in the last two years, following Human Nature in the spring of 2011.
The thirty-nine artists comprising Lost Line span various disciplines,
generations, artistic movements, and geographies with works by Uta Barth,
Lecia Dole-Recio, Shannon Ebner, Harold Edgerton, Buckminster Fuller,
Barbara Kasten, Jim Lambie, Steve McQueen, Yunhee Min, Gabriel Orozco, Ed
Ruscha, Robert Smithson, Frances Stark, and more.
Rita Gonzalez, Associate Curator of Contemporary Art at LACMA, says, “Lost
Line departs from standard displays of permanent museum holdings by
galvanizing aesthetic approaches and creative ideas of twentieth and
twenty-first century thinkers, thus reconsidering the role of the
contemporary in an encyclopedic context.”
Drawn almost entirely from LACMA’s permanent holdings, Lost Line features
numerous gifts to the museum by collectors and artists. With support from
the Modern and Contemporary Art Council and the recently-formed
acquisition groups Art Here and Now (AHAN) Studio Forum and Contemporary
Friends, LACMA has been able to expand its holdings of contemporary art.
Recent acquisitions featured in Lost Line include works by Mark Hagen,
Analia Saban, Amalia Pica, and Gary Simmons.
Exhibition Overview
Lost Line: Contemporary Art from the Collection takes its name from
Gabriel Orozco’s mid-1990s sculpture, Lost Line. Orozco’s oily orb—
fashioned from plasticine and cotton string—reveals both the process of
its creation and the movement involved in its exhibition placement. It has
been described by the artist as “the opposite of a static monument.”
A
number of objects in LACMA’s exhibition similarly rethink the form and
function of monuments by proposing bold and sometimes witty alternatives
to the epic, including Shannon Ebner’s Raw War (2004), Harold Edgerton’s
Stonehenge from Airplane (1944), and Robert Smithson’s Proposal for a
Monument at Antarctica (1966). Making its West Coast exhibition debut,
Steve McQueen’s video installation Static (2009) offers a detailed
portrait of the Statue of Liberty while distorting the surroundings of
America’s most renowned monument into abstraction.
The exhibition acknowledges the ongoing dialogue between artists and
prominent thinkers from other disciplines through the inclusion of works
from design and science. Visionary Buckminster Fuller’s influential
Dymaxion Air-Ocean World Map (1981), for instance, is juxtaposed with
works associated with land art and conceptual art, while inventor Harold
Edgerton’s aerial photograph of Stonehenge is situated alongside works by
Analia Saban, Claes Oldenberg, and Amalia Pica.
A number of painted and photographic abstractions in Lost Line draw visual
parallels to topographic and architectural forms. In the works of James
Welling, Barbara Kasten, David Benjamin Sherry, and Sheila Pinkel, there
are indications of terrestrial contours and architectural forms. Lost Line
will also feature a sculptural installation by Yunhee Min that is an
architectural insertion into the museum galleries.
Credit
This exhibition was organized by the Los Angeles County Museum of Art.
About LACMA
Since its inception in 1965, LACMA has been devoted to collecting works of art that
span both history and geography-and represent Los Angeles's uniquely diverse
population. Today, the museum features particularly strong collections of Asian, Latin
American, European, and American art, as well as a contemporary museum on its campus.
With this expanded space for contemporary art, innovative collaborations with artists,
and an ongoing Transformation project, LACMA is creating a truly modern lens through
which to view its rich encyclopedic collection.
Press Contact: For additional information, contact LACMA Communications at
press@lacma.org or 323 857-6522.
Image: Gabriel Orozco, Lost Line, 1993-1996, plasticine and cotton string; gift of the Peter Norton Family Foundation
Opening: 25 november 2012
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