Dia Al Azzawi
Art & Language
Donald Baechler
Georg Baselitz
Jean-Michel Basquiat
Mike Bidlo
Erwin Blumenfeld
brassai
Sophie Calle
Maurizio Cattelan
Patrick Caulfield
Clegg & Guttmann
Henri-Georges Clouzot
George Condo
Hanne Darboven
Rineke Dijkstra
Robert Doisneau
Marlene Dumas
David Douglas Duncan
Hans-Peter Feldmann
Fritz Fenzl
Gelitin
Amjad Ghannam
Felix Gmelin
Karl Otto Gotz
Leon Golub
Rodney Rraham
Richard Hamilton
Rachel Harrison
Richard Hawkins
Anton Henning
David Hockney
Khaled Hourani
Thomas Houseago
Gary Hume
Jasper Johns
Folkert De Jong
Asger Jorn
Birgit Jurgenssen
Martin Kippenberger
Ernst Ludwig Kirchner
Paul Klee
Sean Landers
Maria Lassnig
Louise Lawler
Roy Lichtenstein
Robert Longo
Dora Maar
Marcin Maciejowski
Goshka Macuga
Madame D‘Ora
Jonathan Meese
Gjon Mili
Jonathan Monk
Robert Motherwell
Otto Muehl
Albert Oehlen
Claes Oldenburg
A. R. Penck
Irving Penn
Sigmar Polke
Richard Prince
Arnulf Rainer
Eugenio Recuenco
Dieter Roth
Cheri Samba
Thomas Schutte
Cindy Sherman
John Stezaker
Francesco Vezzoli
Andre Villers
Andy Warhol
Joel Peter Witkin
Alexander Wolff
Zeng Fanzhi
Zhang Hongtu
Zhou Tiehai
Thomas Zipp
heimo Zobernig
The show is dedicated to the overwhelming spectrum of modern and contemporary artists' perspectives on Picasso. With approximately 200 works on loan created by 90 internationally known artists.
To mark the 25th anniversary of the foundation of the Deichtorhallen Hamburg, an extensive exhibition on the theme of »Picasso in Contemporary Art« will be held from April 1 to July 12, 2015. As the opening presentation in the Deichtorhallen’s intensively renovated and modernized Hall for Contemporary Art, the show is dedicated to the overwhelming spectrum of modern and contemporary artists’ perspectives on Picasso. With approximately 200 works on loan − from London’s Tate Modern and Paris’s Centre Pompidou, among others − created by 90 internationally known artists, the show deals with Picasso and his impact on art without showing a single Picasso. Ranging between veneration, intellectual assimilation, and reinterpretation, the works by extremely famous artists, such as Georg Baselitz, Brassaï, Sophie Calle, Marlene Dumas, Jasper Johns, Martin Kippenberger, Roy Lichtenstein, and Robert Longo demonstrate the current relevance of Picasso’s work.
Picasso embodies the art of the 20th century like no other artist. He has been admired, but also hated; he has been celebrated, studied, and copied. Even today, the substance of his painting and his artistic individualism is yet to be exhausted. In the words of Dirk Luckow, the curator of the exhibition: »Picasso’s art is so influential today because his work and his person cannot be divided from one another and this makes his work seem exemplary. It has remained fascinating and relevant in terms of its political and formal aspects. The once-in-a-century genius’s impact on contemporary art still continues to be underestimated.«
Today’s artists attitude towards Picasso’s creations resembles Picasso’s own playing with prototypes. To the very end, the artist was driven to grapple with his own predecessors. The exhibition »Picasso in Contemporary Art« sets forth this form of painterly dialogue: what applies to Picasso also applies to today’s artists. These artists’ works are often anything but pious in dealing with their brilliant predecessor. At the same time, all of the artists selected for the exhibition share one thing in common, namely, their desire to measure themselves against Picasso and his work. Picasso’s biography − situated between formal experiment, the battle of the sexes, and international politics, between an intoxicating feast for the senses and tragedy – offers almost collective memories of those facets of his work that artists still continue to associate with Picasso today and that play a role in the creation of their works. The quality of the artists’ reflective depth and their methodological approach to dealing with Picasso thus became the key factors in selecting works for the exhibition.
All of the major subjects and periods in Picasso’s oeuvre reappear in the exhibition in the from of artist’s reception of them: the Blue Period and the associated themes of loneliness, despair, and poverty, but also more lively motifs from the Rose Period, such as the world of the circus, Harlequin, or tightrope walkers. Beyond this, Les Demoiselles d’Avignon – as the first Cubist painting – and Picasso’s works of the 1920s and 1930s – in which he combines harsh Cubist elements with wide, gentle, and rounded curves – have been stimulating responses among artists for generations. Picasso’s aggressive deformations, which culminated in the reproachful anti-war painting Guernica, have led to a spectacular series of political pictorial compositions stretching from the second half of the 20th century to today. In the exhibition, this aspect alone is represented by six monumental Guernica interpretations, including Robert Longo’s 1:1 homage to Guernica.
Perceptions of Picasso among leading international female artists, such as Cindy Sherman, Maria Lassnig, Marlen Dumas, and Hanne Darboven, form another focal point of the exhibition. At the same time, themes like »Picasso and German art« or American appropriation art’s handling of Picasso’s oeuvre are dealt with as well. The exhibition »Picasso in Contemporary Art« thus sheds light on shifts in the reception of Picasso’s work among artists. The exhibition begins chronologically with works from the 1930s by Paul Klee, Ernst Ludwig Kirchner, and Erwin Blumenfeld; however, its focus is on the last 50 years of art, beginning with works by Andy Warhol, Roy Lichtenstein, Claes Oldenburg, Asger Jorn, and Jasper Johns.
The great sensuality and utterly inexhaustible power of imagination as well as the broad range of Picasso’s work between abstraction and figuration, artistic creativity and political reproach have challenged all of these artists − down to the present day – to engage in particularly captivating dialogues with the phenomenon of Picasso
Image: invitation card
Press Contact:
Angelika Leu-Barthel, leu-barthel@deichtorhallen.de
Phone +49 (0)40 32103-250
Opening: Tue 31 Mar 19:00
Hall for Contemporary Art
Deichtorstraße 1-2
20095 Hamburg