Trevor Bell
Billy Al Bengston
Peter Blake
Mel Bochner
John Cage
Brian Calvin
Vija Celmins
Russell Crotty
Thomas Demand
Kaye Donachie
Isa Genzken
Liam Gillick
Jeremy Glogan
Joe Goode
George Greenough
Rodney Graham
Richard Hawkins
Roger Hiorns
Jim Isermann
sister Corita Kent
Roy Lichtenstein
John McCracken
Lee Mullican
Kaz Oshiro
Bruno Peinado
Raymond Pettibon
Richard Pettibone
Ken Price
Martial Raysse
Bridget Riley
Allen Ruppersberg
Ed Ruscha
Jim Shaw
Fred Tomaselli
Jennifer West
Pae White
Daria Wilson
Isaac Witkin
Alex Farquharson
Brian Wilson, an art exhibition
Exhibition organized in association with Tate St-Ives, Cornwall, UK
Guest curator: Alex Farquharson
List of the artists: Trevor Bell, Billy Al Bengston, Peter Blake, Mel Bochner, John Cage, Brian Calvin, Vija Celmins, Russell Crotty, Thomas Demand, Kaye Donachie, Isa Genzken, Liam Gillick, Jeremy Glogan, Joe Goode, George Greenough, Rodney Graham, Richard Hawkins, Roger Hiorns, Jim Isermann, sister Corita Kent, Roy Lichtenstein, John McCracken, Lee Mullican, Kaz Oshiro, Bruno Peinado, Raymond Pettibon, Richard Pettibone, Ken Price, Martial Raysse, Bridget Riley, Allen Ruppersberg, Ed Ruscha, Jim Shaw, Fred Tomaselli, Jennifer West, Pae White, Daria Wilson, Isaac Witkin.
In this exhibition, Brian Wilson’s life and music becomes a lens through which to reconsider various developments in art since the 60s, particularly as they relate to their social, urban and popular cultural contexts, especially as manifested in southern California. At the same time, art becomes a means of considering the contradictions between the popular image of the Beach Boys and Wilson’s complex musical aspirations and legacy. By focusing on works in which Pop Art, abstract painting, Minimalism and Conceptual art variously converge - a recurring phenomenon in art from the West Coast - the exhibition implicitly questions the mutual exclusivity of these art historical categories. These convergences find a parallel in Brian Wilson’s suturing of rock n roll, jazz, classical music, folk and the avant-garde (e.g. musique concrete) in his pioneering production work of the mid 60s. They also complicate, rather than altogether refute, the binary, antagonistic ways wit h which many Modernist thinkers have framed the relationship between the avant-garde and popular culture (e.g. Theodor Adorno, Guy Debord and Clement Greenberg). Brian Wilson, himself, was something of a victim of this antagonism, paying a high psychological price for his dual identity as both pop star and
avant-garde artist.
The focus of the exhibition is that brief and prolific period from 1962 to 1967 when Wilson was the principal creative force behind the Beach Boys. The works are arranged somewhat episodically to suggest a loose biographical and historical arc. 'Loose' because few of the art works were made with Brian Wilson or the Beach Boys in mind. Generally, they were chosen to evoke the feel and form of the music, or something of the social, cultural and psychological circumstances from which it arose. The exhibition plays off the conventions of thematic exhibitions - biography being a particularly circumscribed thematic genre - by behaving in untypically ambiguous, multivalent ways; the emphasis is on free association rather than representation. Nevertheless, the project arose from the conviction that Brian Wilson offers an unexpectedly coherent organising principal for a disparate collection of post-1960s art.
CAPC Musée d’art contemporain de Bordeaux
Entrepôt Lainé, Galerie Ferrère 7 rue Ferrère - 33000 Bordeaux