Object Matter. Heinecken worked across multiple mediums, including photography, sculpture, printmaking, and collage. His works explore themes of commercialism, Americana, kitsch, sex, the body, and gender. In doing so, the works in this exhibition expose his obsession with popular culture and its effects on society, and with the relationship between the original and the copy.
curated by Eva Respini and Nancy Newhall
The Museum of Modern Art presents Robert Heinecken:
Object Matter, the first retrospective of the work of Robert Heinecken since his death in 2006
and the first exhibition on the East Coast to cover four decades of the artist’s unique practice,
from the early 1960s through the late 1990s, on view from March 15 to September 7, 2014.
Describing himself as a ―para-photographer,‖ because his work stood ―beside‖ or ―beyond‖
traditional ideas associated with photography, Heinecken worked across multiple mediums,
including photography, sculpture, printmaking, and collage. Culling images from newspapers,
magazines, pornography, and television, he recontextualized them through collage and
assemblage, photograms, darkroom experimentation, and rephotography. His works explore
themes of commercialism, Americana, kitsch, sex, the body, and gender. In doing so, the works in
this exhibition expose his obsession with popular culture and its effects on society, and with the
relationship between the original and the copy.
Robert Heinecken: Object Matter is organized by
Eva Respini, Curator, with Drew Sawyer, Beaumont and Nancy Newhall Curatorial Fellow,
Department of Photography, The Museum of Modern Art. The exhibition will travel to the Hammer
Museum, and will be on view there from October 5, 2014 through January 17, 2015.
Heinecken dedicated his life to making art and teaching, establishing the photography
program at UCLA in 1964, where he taught until 1991. He began making photographs in the early
1960s. The antithesis of the fine-print tradition exemplified by West Coast photographers Ansel
Adams and Edward Weston, who photographed landscapes and objects in sharp focus and with
objective clarity, Heinecken’s early work is marked by high contrast, blur, and under- or
overexposure, as seen in Shadow Figure (1962) and Strip of Light (1964). In the mid-1960s he
began combining and sequencing disparate pictures, as in Visual Poem/About the Sexual
Education of a Young Girl (1965), which comprises seven black-and-white photographs of dolls
with a portrait of his then-five-year-old daughter Karol at the center.
The female nude is a recurring motif, featured in Refractive Hexagon (1965), one of
several ―photopuzzles‖ composed of photographs of female body parts mounted onto 24 individual
―puzzle‖ pieces. Other three-dimensional sculptures—geometric volumes ranging in height from
five to 22 inches—consist of photographs mounted onto individual blocks, which rotate
independently around a central axis. In Fractured Figure Sections (1967), as in Refractive
Hexagon, the female figure is never resolved as a single image—the body is always truncated,
never contiguous. In contrast, a complete female figure can be reconstituted in his largest photoobject,
Transitional Figure Sculpture (1965), a towering 26-layer octagon composed from
photographs of a nude that have been altered using various printing techniques. At the time,
viewer engagement was key to creating random configurations and relationships in the work; any
number of possibilities may exist, only to be altered with the next manipulation. Today, due to the
fragility of the works, these objects are displayed in Plexiglas-covered vitrines. However, the
number of sculptures and puzzles gathered here offer the viewer a sense of this diversity.
Heinecken’s groundbreaking suite Are You Rea (1964–68) is a series of 25 photograms
made directly from magazine pages. Representative of a culture that was increasingly
commercialized, technologically mediated, and suspicious of established truths, Are You Rea
cemented Heinecken’s interest in the multiplicity of meanings inherent in existing images and
situations. Culled from more than 2000 magazine pages, the work includes pictures from
publications such as Life, Time, and Woman’s Day, contact-printed so that both sides are
superimposed in a single image. Heinecken’s choice of pages and imagery are calculated to reveal
specific relationships and meanings—ads for Coppertone juxtaposed with ads for spaghetti dinners
and an article about John F. Kennedy superimposed on an ad for Wessex carpets—the portfolio’s
narrative moves from relatively commonplace and alluring images of women to representations of
violence and the male body.
Heinecken began altering magazines in 1969 with a series of 120 periodicals titled
MANSMAG: Homage to Werkman and Cavalcade. He used the erotic men’s magazine Cavalcade as
source material, making plates of every page, and randomly printing them on pages that were
then reassembled into a magazine, now scrambled. In the same year, he disassembled numerous
Time magazines, imprinting pornographic images taken from Cavalcade on every page, and
reassembled them with the original Time covers. He circulated these reconstituted magazines by
leaving them in waiting rooms or slipping them onto newsstands, allowing the work to come full
circle—the source material returning to its point of origin after modification. He reprised this
technique in 1989 with an altered issue of Time titled 150 Years of Photojournalism, a greatest
hits of historical events seen through the lens of photography.
Transparent film is also used in many of Heinecken’s works to explore different kinds of
juxtapositions. In Kodak Safety Film/Christmas Mistake (1971), pornographic images are
superimposed on a Christmas snapshot of Heinecken’s children with the suggestion in the title
that somehow two rolls of film were mixed up at the photo lab. Kodak Safety Film/Taos Church
(1972) takes photography itself as a subject, picturing an adobe church in New Mexico that was
famously photographed by Ansel Adams and Paul Strand, and painted by Georgia O’Keeffe and
John Marin. Presented as a negative, Heinecken’s version transforms an icon of modernism into a
murky structure flanked by a pickup truck, telephone wires, and other modern-day debris.
Heinecken’s hybrid photographic paintings, created by applying photographic emulsion on
canvas, are well represented in the exhibition. In Figure Horizon #1(1971), Heinecken reprised
the cut-and-reassemble techniques from his puzzles and photo-sculptures, sequencing images of
sections of the nude female body, to create impossible undulating landscapes. Cliché Vary, a pun
on the 19th-century cliché verre process, is comprised of three large-scale modular works, all
from 1974: Autoeroticism, Fetishism, and Lesbianism. The works are comprised of separately
stretched canvas panels with considerable hand-applied color on the photographic image, invoking
clichés associated with autoeroticism, fetishism, and lesbianism. Reminiscent of his cut-andreassembled
pieces, each panel features disjointed views of bodies and fetish objects that never
make a whole, and increase in complexity, culminating with Lesbianism, which is made with seven
or eight different negatives.
In the mid-1970s, Heinecken experimented with new materials introduced by Polaroid—
specifically the SX-70 camera (which required no darkroom or technical know-how)—to produce
the series He/She (1975–1980) and, later, Lessons in Posing Subjects (1981–82). Heinecken
experimented with different types of instant prints, including the impressive two-panel S.S.
Copyright Project: “On Photography” (1978), made the year after the publication of Susan
Sontag’s collection of essays On Photography (1977). The S.S. Copyright Project consists of a
magnified and doubled picture of Sontag, derived from the book’s dustcover portrait (taken by Jill
Krementz). The work equates legibility with physical proximity—from afar, the portraits appear to
be grainy enlargements from a negative (or, to contemporary eyes, pixilated low-resolution
images), but at close range, it is apparent that the panels are composed of hundreds of small
photographic scraps stapled together. The portrait on the left is composed of photographs of
Sontag’s text; the right features random images taken around Heinecken’s studio by his assistant.
Heinecken’s first large-scale sculptural installation, TV/Time Environment (1970), is the
earliest in a series of works that address the increasingly dominant presence of television in
American culture. In the installation, a positive film transparency of a female nude is placed in
front of a functioning television set in an environment that evokes a living room, complete with
recliner chair, plastic plant, and rug. Continuing his work with television, Heinecken created
videograms—direct captures from the television that were produced by pressing Cibachrome
paper onto the screen to expose the sensitized paper. Inaugural Excerpt Videograms (1981)
features a composite from the live television broadcast of Ronald Reagan’s inauguration speech
and the surrounding celebrations. The work, originally in 27 parts, now in 24, includes randomly
chosen excerpts of the oration and news reports of it. Surrealism on TV (1986) explores the idea
of transparency and layering using found media images to produce new readings. It features a
slide show comprised of more than 200 images loaded into three slide projectors and projected in
random order. The images generally fit into broad categories, which include newscasters, animals,
TV evangelists, aerobics, and explosions.
SPONSORSHIP:
Major support for the exhibition is provided by The William Randolph Hearst Endowment Fund and
by The Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation.
Additional funding is provided by The Junior Associates of The Museum of Modern Art and by the
MoMA Annual Exhibition Fund.
Special thanks to the Center for Creative Photography, University of Arizona, Tucson, which
houses the Robert Heinecken Archive, and to The Robert Heinecken Trust, Chicago.
PUBLICATION:
The accompanying publication Robert Heinecken: Object Matter by Eva Respini is the most
complete survey of the artist’s oeuvre. Respini’s essay sets his work in the context of twentiethcentury
photographic experimentation and conceptual art; an illustrated essay about his
experimental techniques by conservator Jennifer Jae Gutierrez contributes to the sparse
scholarship on Heinecken’s working methods. A selection of Heinecken’s eloquent writings on art
and photography foregrounds the artist’s voice in the reading of his work today.
188 pages; 300 illustrations. Hardcover, $50. Available from MoMA stores and online at
MoMAstore.org. Distributed to the trade by ARTBOOK|D.A.P. in the United States and Canada.
Distributed outside the United States and Canada by Thames & Hudson.
PUBLIC PROGRAMS:
Robert Heinecken: Art and Pornography
Wednesday, March 26, 2014, 6:00 p.m.
This panel, held in conjunction with the exhibition Robert Heinecken: Object Matter, explores
pornography in art as it pertains to Heinecken's work and to visual culture in general over the last
40 years. Participants include film director and photographer Larry Clark, Sarah Nicole Prickett,
editor of Adult magazine, and artists Marilyn Minter and A. L. Steiner. Moderated by Eva Respini,
organizer of the exhibition and curator in MoMA's Department of Photography.
Audio Tour:
The accompanying audio guide features commentaries by curators Eva Respini and Drew Sawyer,
as well as Heinecken speaking about his own work, excerpted from a lecture the artist delivered in
1988. MoMA Audio+ is available free of charge at the Museum and is also available for streaming
and download at MoMA.org, MoMA.org/audio, and as a podcast on iTunes. MoMA Audio+ is
sponsored by Bloomberg.
Image: Recto/Verso #2. 1988. Silver dye bleach print, 8 5/8 x 7 7/8" (21.9
x 20 cm). The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Mr. and Mrs. Clark Winter
Fund. © 2014 The Robert Heinecken Trust
Press Contacts:
Meg Montgoris, (212) 708-9757 or meg_montgoris@moma.org
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