Of Two Minds, Simultaneously. The first comprehensive retrospective in Europe by the America. The exhibition follows his almost inimitable development up till now, starting with his collages from the 1990s. The extensive exhibition contains some 90 works that give a nonlinear, non-chronological survey of artist's oeuvre in all its diversity, seen from different angles. In the Shadow Cabinet a shadow curator has invited Alberto de Michele, whose installation focuses on an Italian bank robber who for a period of time was hiding in Amsterdam.
Of Two Minds, Simultaneously
"Hawkins' work … provides a multiplicity that gives rise to an engaging set of
possible readings, generating all manner of blends, crossbreds, hybrids or chimeras,
the revelatory impure, and often monstrously beautiful."
Dominic Eichler ("Variety Shows", in: Afterall, spring/summer 2007, pg. 52)
De Appel presents the first comprehensive retrospective in Europe by the American
artist Richard Hawkins (USA, 1961). The exhibition follows Hawkins' almost
inimitable development up till now: starting with his collages from the 1990s;
intriguing because they show how a powerful artwork can originate from very few
visual means, right up to his recent dolls' houses transformed into brothels that
herald another completely new direction in Hawkins' heterogeneous oeuvre.
The extensive exhibition contains some 90 works that give a nonlinear,
non-chronological survey of Hawkins' oeuvre in all its diversity, seen from
different angles. In his work Hawkins looks both critically and appreciatively at
social, cultural and historical phenomena, mixing these with autobiographical
motives to create a multiform body of work linked by countless internal references
in ideas, material and style. These formal and internal links resonate throughout
the whole Appel exhibition space as components of themes that range from male
desire, gender issues and pop star idolization to the struggle of mixed-race Native
Americans or the function of hermaphrodite statuary in the Roman era.
The Los Angeles-based Hawkins began his career as a curator and writer. He first
became active as an artist in the early 1990s and now ranks as one of the most
remarkable artists from the American West Coast. Hawkins' earliest, invariably
erotically-tinged collages, consist of photos of film celebrities, male models or
porn stars, their contexts remodelled and turned into compositions which tease out
homo-erotic admiration and desire. This obsessive desire is mixed with a certain
sweet nostalgia as private yearning blends with public images. The late 1990s saw
the creation of the controversial series "Disembodied Zombies"; inkjet prints with
decapitated heads of idealized male icons bleeding profusely from their severed
necks against brightly coloured polychrome backgrounds. Horror and fantasy are
interwoven in these alluring, shocking works.
Quite suddenly towards the end of the 1990s, Hawkins began to wield a paint brush,
resulting in a diverse series of paintings typified by an extraordinarily flexible
aesthetic and wide ranging thematic variation. Brushy "pure abstraction" in garish,
lively hues lead into figurative history paintings in which Hawkins reworks his own
Creek Indian roots and that place him in the tradition of such urban satirists and
American Scene painters as Reginald Marsh and Philip Evergood. More recent vividly
painted canvases of bar scenes in the sex-tourism industry of S.E. Asia, described
by Hawkins himself as "hallucinations from a Viagra overdose", sit next to another
new segment of his work, "Urbis Paganus", an ever-expanding series of collages that
celebrate the diversity of gender and sexualities under
pagan rule.
To accompany the exhibition a publication with contributions by a.o. Ann Demeester
and Bruce Hainley will be issued. For more information please contact Edna van Duyn
at ednavanduyn@deappel.nl
Side events:
The Shadow Cabinet
Alberto de Michele
"Adriano"
November 17th - February 3rd 2008
In addition to its regular menu -- the exhibitions -- de Appel is offering a
selection of 'side dishes' -- additional events that run from lectures and book
presentations to the mini-exhibitions in the Shadow Cabinet. In The Shadow Cabinet
past and present students from the Curatorial Programme (CP), the course for young
talented curators which de Appel has been running since 1994, are invited to present
their own projects to a wider public in the former director's office. This time a
shadowcurator has invited Alberto de Michele (IT/NL 1980), whose installation
focuses on an Italian bank robber who for a period of time was hiding in Amsterdam.
Lecture by Richard Hawkins
November 20th 2007, 5pm
Within the framework of the lecture series 'Indian Summer 2007,
Artists' lectures', Richard Hawkins will give a lecture at De Ateliers in Amsterdam.
For more info see: http://www.de-ateliers.nl Reservations at: office@de-ateliers.nl
Image: Richard Hawkins, disembodied zombie george blue large, 1997, courtesy Telles Fine Art
De Appel
Nieuwe Spiegelstraat 10 - Amsterdam