Stitches in Time includes an extraordinary group of life-size sewn fabric busts, a series of cell-like vitrines, housing curious scenes of torture and ecstasy, and a small group of totemic figures, reinterpreting in fabric Bourgeois's very first sculptures of the late 1940s and '50s. Over 20 pieces, most created in the last three years, are accompanied by a selection of the artist's graphic work including He disappeared into Complete Silence, 1946, her first major suite of etchings and poems in which she unfolds tales of loss and loneliness.
Louise Bourgeois at the Irish Museum of Modern Art
The first large-scale exhibition in Ireland by Louise Bourgeois, one of the
greatest and most influential artists of our time, opens to the public at the
Irish Museum of Modern Art on Wednesday 26 November 2003.
Stitches in Time includes an extraordinary group of life-size sewn fabric busts,
a series of cell-like vitrines, housing curious scenes of torture and ecstasy,
and a small group of totemic figures, reinterpreting in fabric Bourgeois's very
first sculptures of the late 1940s and '50s. Over 20 pieces, most created in
the last three years, are accompanied by a selection of the artist's graphic
work including He disappeared into Complete Silence, 1946, her first major suite
of etchings and poems in which she unfolds tales of loss and loneliness.
The exhibition is presented in association with THE IRISH TIMES with support
from the French Embassy. The opening is sponsored by Beck's Beer.
Born in 1911, Louise Bourgeois was one of the first artists to assert the
importance of autobiography and identity as subjects for contemporary artists.
Her family background and childhood in the suburbs of Paris and the traumatic
relationship between her father, mother and governess have continued to underpin
her work throughout her long career. Seven in a Bed, 2001, for example, seems
to distil the artist's memory of far distant weekend mornings when she and her
siblings would tumble into bed with their parents, but the Janus-like addition
of extra heads warns us that things, especially people, are not always what they
seem.
In the 1980s Bourgeois began making a series of theatrical spaces entitled
Cells, representing different types of pain - "the physical, the emotional and
the psychological, and the mental and the intellectual". The Cells are
self-contained or partial enclosures which can be experienced either by entering
the space or by encountering it close up through mesh walls, doors or windows.
These works are the anthesis of Bourgeois' famous monumental installations, such
as the three vast towers, I do, I undo, I redo, commissioned for the opening of
Tate Modern in 2000.
Some of the most arresting of Bourgeois' recent works are a series of
extraordinary upright and front-facing fabric heads, of which three can be seen
in the exhibition. Sewn with a crudeness that belies their structural
sophistication, they are nevertheless uncannily lifelike - open mouths appear
moist from exhalation and their eyes apparently focus directly on the viewer, or
seem to deliberately glance away. These are difficult works to confront; a
difficulty compounded by the mute and resistant glass cases which encase them.
Born in Paris during the heyday of Cubism, Bourgeois moved to New York following
her marriage to the American art historian Robert Goldwater. Her first
exhibition of sculpture took place in 1949. Although her early work was
respected by contemporaries, it was not until she was 71 that she received wider
acclaim for her first major retrospective at New York's Museum of Modern Art.
The exhibition revealed a sculptor of startling originality and a unique ability
to work with many different materials, from marble and bronze to latex and
fabric. The event gave Bourgeois the confidence and opportunity to set out, in
fascinating detail, not only the domestic dramas of her childhood but also the
architecture, furnishings and artefacts which had surrounded her as the child of
a mother whose family had been engaged in the Aubusson tapestry industry and a
father who was a dealer in restored tapestry and antique furniture.
Now in her 92nd year Louise Bourgeois's artistic practice has spanned the best
part of the last century. She has always led the field of innovation, often
working at more than one remove from the well-known avant-garde movements of her
lifetime: Surrealism, Abstract Expressionism, Pop, Minimal and Conceptual art.
The exhibition is selected by Frances Morris, Senior Curator, Tate Modern, and
is co-curated by her with Brenda McParland, Head of Exhibitions at IMMA.
Talks and Lectures
Louise Bourgeois: Stitches in Time
Frances Morris, Senior Curator, Tate Modern, and co-curator of the exhibition
presents an illustrated lecture on the artist's work.
Wednesday 26 November from 1.00 - 2.00pm
Edmund Burke Theatre, Arts Block Trinity College, Dublin
This lecture is presented in associated with the History of Art Department, TCD.
Louise Bourgeois: Stitches in Times
French artist, Françoise Dupré, currently on IMMA's Artists' Work Programme,
responds to the Louise Bourgeois exhibition, discussing aspects of the artist's
work that are particularly relevant to the contemporary art context and Dupré's
own practice.
Tuesday 2 December 12.00 noon
Chapel, IMMA
All talks and lectures are free and open to the public.
Booking is essential.
Tel: 351 - 1 - 612 9948; email ed.comm@modernart.ie
A catalogue published by IMMA and August Projects, with an essay by Frances
Morris, accompanies the exhibition.
Admission is free.
Opening hours: Tue - Sat 10.00am
- 5.30pm
Sun and Bank Holidays 12 noon - 5.30pm
and 27, 28, 30 and 31 Dec
Mondays and 24 - 26 Dec Closed
For further information and colour and black and white images please contact
Monica Cullinane or Patrice Molloy at Tel : +353 1 612 9900, Fax : +353 1 612
9999
Irish Museum of Modern Art
Royal Hospital
Military Road
Kilmainham
Dublin 8
Ireland
Phone +353 1 612 9900
Fax +353 1 612 9999