Felix Gonzalez-Torres
Roni Horn
John Dilg
Tyyne Esko
Minnie Evans
China Marks
Henry Speller
Bill Traylor
Carlo Zinelli
Felix Gonzalez-Torres and Roni Horn: a two-person show. Felix was moved and influenced by Roni's work well before he knew her. Subsequently, they became friends, sharing a dialogue of rare intensity. There were very few people who Felix felt akin to in as many fields as he did with Roni—artistic, political, and personal. In Gallery 2 a selection of works from the Luise Ross Gallery: John Dilg, Tyyne Esko, Minnie Evans, China Marks, Henry Speller, Bill Traylor, Carlo Zinelli
Andrea Rosen Gallery is delighted to announce the second in a series of two-person exhibitions exploring the affinities between Felix Gonzalez-Torres' and other artists' works.
As the following text by Felix Gonzalez-Torres illuminates, Felix was moved and influenced by Roni Horn's work well before he knew her. Subsequently, they became friends, sharing a dialogue of rare intensity. Felix was very good at maximizing the strongest aspect of each of his relationships, and he touched and was touched by many. However, there were very few people who Felix felt akin to in as many fields as he did with Roni—artistic, political, and personal.
The format of Felix's memorial was primarily the reading of letters exchanged between Felix and others. Roni was one of few people asked to speak—at Felix's request. The second text below is a portion of that poetic text.
excerpt from "1990: L.A., "The Gold Field", by Felix Gonzalez-Torres
from Earths Grow Thick, Wexner Center for the Arts Roni Horn exhibition catalogue, 1996
L.A. 1990. Ross and I spent every Saturday afternoon visiting galleries, museums, thrift shops, and going on long, very long drives all around L.A., enjoying the "magic hour" when the light makes everything gold and magical in that city. It was the best and worst of times. Ross was dying right in front of my eyes. Leaving me. It was the first time in my life when I knew for sure where the money for rent was coming from. It was a time of desperation, yet of growth too.
1990, L.A. The Gold Field. How can I deal with the Gold Field? I don't quite know. But the Gold Field was there. Ross and I entered the Museum of Contemporary Art, and without knowing the work of Roni Horn we were blown away by the heroic, gentle and horizontal presence of this gift. There it was, in a white room, all by itself, it didn't need company, it didn't need anything. Sitting on the floor, ever so lightly. A new landscape, a possible horizon, a place of rest and absolute beauty. Waiting for the right viewer willing and needing to be moved to a place of the imagination. This piece is nothing more than a thin layer of gold. It is everything a good poem by Wallace Steven is: precise, with no baggage, nothing extra. A poem that feels secure and dares to unravel itself, to become naked, to be enjoyed in a tactile manner, but beyond that, in an intellectual way too. Ross and I were lifted. That gesture was all we needed to rest, to think about the possibility of change. This showed the innate ability of an artist proposing to make this place a better place. How truly revolutionary.
This work was needed. This was an undiscovered ocean for us. It was impossible, yet it was real, we saw this landscape. Like no other landscape. We felt it. We traveled together to countless sunsets. But where did this object come from? Who produced this piece that risked itself by being so fragile, just laying on the floor, no base, no plexiglass box on top of it…. A place to dream, to regain energy, to dare. Ross and I always talked about this work, how much it affected us. After that any sunset became "The Gold Field." Roni had named something that had always been there. Now we saw it through her eyes, her imagination.
excerpt from An Uncountable Infinity—For Felix Gonzalez-Torres—February 1996—by Roni Horn
as read at Felix Gonzalez-Torres' memorial
A field of waves, perhaps an ocean: up close two different tiles recur to form a puzzle in which the image of water coheres. Among these tiles a labyrinth forms as my gaze loops between them and the water.
I am attracted to the little edibles, brightly colored candies mostly, as I partake of the metaphor that would send you around the world. I am a bumble bee—who would pollinate the world with you.
Images of sky, birds, water, murdered people, and certain colors stacked in measures of some critical mass. Each image forms a slice of some lesser but more acute mass that as a letter going out into the world whole, is only completed when it finds the place it is destined for. Each slice signals its own fate.
I am cast into an abrasive and exquisite consciousness.
Everything of me, everything outside of me is tempered by it.
I am laid open.
My skin, my consciousness are turned to glass.
The only risk left now is that of openness.
Framed by sky, buildings, roadways, and signs, the photographs out there on the street—between food and home—bring enigma near. And these enigmas recur. They are riddles that implicate public and private, you and me, us. They open up an Egypt-like space, when Egypt was mostly desert and when Egypt was mostly desert without parking lots, even vacant ones.
You are more nature. Your life is a rare form of transparency through which I have observed the world becoming more present to itself and through which I have become more present to myself. And in all of this, I recognize you, Felix, as another weather.
This exhibition is part of an ongoing series of five exhibitions addressing pairings of artists with whom Felix Gonzalez-Torres' work shared an affinity. Initiated in January 2005 with an exhibition of Felix Gonzalez-Torres and Joseph Kosuth, these exhibitions will be interspersed in our program over the next year and a half. Although each will take on its own form, for this exhibition Roni Horn has chosen the specific works; among others, the subject of Gonzalez-Torres' text, "Gold Field", 1982, and a piece Felix made in direct response to this work, "Untitled" (Placebo-Landscape-for Roni), 1993. Although it is not included in this exhibition, it is interesting to note that Roni Horn made a second gold field piece, "Gold Mats, Paired—For Ross and Felix", 1994-1995, after experiencing "Untitled" (Placebo-Landscape-for Roni).
We plan to publish a catalogue documenting this series with newly commissioned texts for each pairing. Additionally, in the fall of this year, we are anticipating the release of the monograph Felix Gonzalez-Torres edited by Julie Ault and published by steidldangin.
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Gallery 2
A SELECTION OF WORKS FROM THE LUISE ROSS GALLERY
John Dilg, Tyyne Esko, Minnie Evans, China Marks, Henry Speller, Bill Traylor, Carlo Zinelli
Since 1999, Gallery 2 has been a forum for a range of exhibitions outside the main program of the gallery. Shows have included: first time solo exhibitions of young artists, work of established and mid career artists who may have representation elsewhere, projects by artists working outside their standard oeuvre, and exhibitions of work that may be lesser known to our audience.
Falling into the last category, this exhibition delves into the program of another gallery. Luise Ross has generously allowed us to plunder a selection of her gallery stable and engage in a dialogue that crosses generations of artists, gallerists, and aesthetics.
Included are small meditative paintings by John Dilg, frenetic and charged works on paper by Carlo Zinelli, Tyyne Esko's dual interests in poetry and social commentary, life observations translated with a knockout sense of line and form by Bill Traylor, China Marks' vigorously sewn 'paintings' of far-out encounters, the colorful fantasy world of mad architecture, women, and cars by Henry Speller, and Minnie Evans' vibrant designs of magic and hope. The list includes outsider and self taught artists as well as several schooled artists - a ratio that roughly correlates to the diversity of Ross' program. While all of the work in this exhibition is from a slightly different 'time and place', it offers a meaningful exchange with currently emerging strains in contemporary art.
Image: Installation view, Camden Arts Centre, London, UK, "Ad Reinhardt, Joseph Kosuth, Felix Gonzalez-Torres: Symptoms of Interference, Conditions of Possibility", January - March 1994.
Andrea Rosen Gallery
525 West 24th Street New York NY 10011