On viewing to June 16th 2002: Jorge Pardo and Gilberto Zorio: Reverb">
"Blah, blah, blah, your hair, Blah, blah, blah, your eyes; Blah, blah, blah, blah, care,
Blah, blah, blah, blah, skies." -George and Ira Gershwin. Two-part exhibition of works by Roni Horn opens. Each part will feature three series of photographically based works, together with the new sculpture Untitled (Yes) (2001), all of which continue Horn's longstanding interest in questions of difference and identity.
On viewing to June 16th 2002: Jorge Pardo and Gilberto Zorio: Reverb
Roni Horn: Two-part exhibition of works by Roni Horn opens.
Part I: October 17, 2001-February 17, 2002
"Blah, blah, blah, your hair, Blah, blah, blah, your eyes; Blah, blah, blah, blah, care,
Blah, blah, blah, blah, skies." -George and Ira Gershwin
Part II: March 13-June 16, 2002
"Blah, blah, blah, blah, moon, Blah, blah, blah, above; Blah, blah, blah, blah, croon,
Blah, blah, blah, blah, love." -George and Ira Gershwin
A two-part exhibition of works by Roni Horn will open at Dia Center
for the Arts on October 17, 2001. Each part will feature three
series of photographically based works, together with the new
sculpture Untitled (Yes) (2001), all of which continue Horn's
longstanding interest in questions of difference and identity.
Sited in two rooms, the pair of elements that comprise Untitled
(Yes), 2001, activates memory to explore notions of difference and
sameness. A glass block of exceptional clarity renders almost
paradoxical the idea of physical transparency, while its opaque
counterpart becomes equally confounding: a black mirror mutates all
reflection into a spectral negative of itself. Contending modalities
of phenomena and appearance also subtend Clowd and Cloun (Gray)
(2001), a series of alternating images of these two motifs. If
mutability of appearance is integral to the phenomenon of the
cloud-- since dissolution or erasure is inevitable--the converse is
proposed for the clown. The clown is a constant, a symbolic form
whose identity is rooted in a conventionally defined appearance, one
which occludes the specifics of the persona-- the player-- who
temporarily assumes that guise.
Taken with a point-and-shoot camera, the panoply of images of a
young girl that make up This Is Me, This Is You (2000) is presented
in two paired groups located on opposite walls of the gallery.
Minute differences between individual pairs of images counterpoints
vast shifts in mood, dress, and expression. Unstable and
irresolvable, the relation of appearance to identity-- indeed, the
very nature of identity-- is here revealed as dependent on a
fundamental but mutable distinction, intimated in a child's
explanatory proposition: this is me, this is you. The earliest body
of work to be included in the exhibition, Some Thames (2000), like
This Is Me, This Is You, takes up the idea of the multitude in one.
It further develops Horn's ongoing fascination with the amorphous,
essential, elusive, but familiar, nature of water, a fascination
that also informs Saying Water (2001), a related audio CD produced
specially for this show.
In Part II of the exhibition, a second variant of the Clowd and
Cloun series will be shown, and Some Thames will be replaced with a
new photographic work, Becoming a Landscape (2001).
Roni Horn
Since the 1970s, Horn, who was born in 1955, has produced work in a
variety of mediums, including sculpture, photography, drawing,
essays, and books. She has had solo exhibitions at the Whitney
Museum of American Art, New York (2000); Musée d'Art Moderne de la
Ville de Paris (1999); De Pont Foundation for Contemporary Art,
Tilburg, the Netherlands (1998; 1994); Wexner Center for the Arts,
Columbus, Ohio (1996); Kunsthalle Basel (1995); Baltimore Museum of
Art (1994); Kunstmuseum Basel (1997; 1995); New Museum for Living
Art, Reykjavik (1992); Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles
(1990), and elsewhere. She has also exhibited at the Venice Biennale
(1997); Documenta IX (1992), and the 1991 Whitney Biennial. Since
1989, Horn's Things That Happen Again (1986) has been on long-term
exhibition at the Chinati Foundation in Marfa, Texas. She is a
participant in the Thames and Hudson Rivers Project, sponsored by
Minetta Brook (New York) and the Public Art Development Trust
(London).
Dia Center for the Arts
Established in 1974, Dia Center for the Arts plays a vital role
among visual arts institutions nationally and internationally by
initiating, supporting, presenting, and preserving art projects in
nearly every medium, and by serving as a primary locus for
interdisciplinary art and criticism. Its first major projects were
long-term sited works of art not likely to be accommodated by
conventional museums because of their nature or scale, created by
artists such as Walter De Maria, Dan Flavin, and Donald Judd.
Dia presents a temporary exhibition program in its renovated
warehouse buildings in Chelsea, New York. Supplementary programming
in Chelsea includes commissioned artist web projects, lectures,
poetry readings, film and video screenings, performances, scholarly
research and publications, symposia, and an arts education program
that serves area students. Dia is currently constructing a new
facility in Beacon, New York, sixty miles north of New York City, to
display its permanent collection, which comprises in-depth holdings
of many of the most important artists of the 1960s and 1970s.
Exhibition hours during the 2001-2002 season are Wednesday through
Sunday, 12 noon to 6 pm, from September 12, 2001.
Current exhibitions:
Jorge Pardo and Gilberto Zorio: Reverb, to June 16th 2002.
Admission fee for the exhibitions is $6, $3 for students and seniors, and free for members
and children under 10 years. Dia's hours are Wednesday through Sunday from 12 noon to
6 pm. The 2001-2002 season runs from September 12, 2001 - June 16, 2002.