Structures of Existence. The exhibition presents the 'Cells', a series of architectural spaces that preoccupied her for nearly 20 years. Each is a multi-faceted collection of objects and sculptural forms arranged to evoke an atmosphere of emotional resonance.
In an artistic career spanning seven decades, Louise Bourgeois (1911, Paris – 2010, New York) created a unique body of work in a wide range of form, material and scale. In the 1940s, she pioneered the use of environmental installation for her work, and in the 1970s and 80s she would at times bring her sculpture into dialogue with theater and performance. Further, her work helped shift critical discourse to encompass psychoanalysis and feminism, theories that have since become prevalent in the artistic language of contemporary art today.
Among the most innovative and challenging sculptural works in her extensive oeuvre are the "Cells", a series of architectural spaces that preoccupied her for nearly 20 years. Bourgeois's "Cells" are intensely psychological microcosms: situated within various enclosures, each is a multi-faceted collection of objects and sculptural forms arranged to evoke an atmosphere of emotional resonance. In almost theatrical scenes, these everyday objects, items of clothing or fabric, or furniture, along with singular sculptures by Bourgeois, create a charged barrier between the interior world of the artist and the exterior world that is the exhibition space.
As Bourgeois stated: "The 'Cells' represent different types of pain: the physical, the emotional and psychological, and the mental and intellectual. When does the emotional become physical? When does the physical become emotional? It's a circle going round and round. …Each 'Cell' deals with the pleasure of the voyeur, the thrill of looking and being looked at. The 'Cells' either attract or repulse each other. There is this urge to integrate, merge, or disintegrate." (Louise Bourgeois, 1991)
In this exhibition, the first to concentrate on the "Cells" series, Haus der Kunst will assemble the largest number of "Cells" presented to date. It will also include important works from previous decades that led to the development of this body of work. This comprehensive survey will bring to light key facets of Bourgeois's thinking about space and memory, the body and architecture, and the conscious and the unconscious.
Image: Louise Bourgeois, Cell II, 1991 (detail), Collection Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh, photo Peter Bellamy © The Easton Foundation / VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2015
Press Contact:
Dr. Elena Heitsch, presse@hausderkunst.de
Opening: Thursday, 26.02, 7 pm
Haus der Kunst
Prinzregentenstraße 1 80538 Munich
Mon — Sun 10 am — 8 pm, Thu 10 am — 10 pm
Admission 8 € / reduced rate 6 €
under 18 2 € / children under 12 free
Combined ticket
2 exhibitions 12 € / reduced rate 10 €
3 exhibitions 15 € / reduced rate 12 €