John M Armleder
Mathias Bengtsson
Dunne & Raby
Gardar Eide Einarsson
Olafur Eliasson
Gregor Hildebrandt
Sergej Jensen
Shiro Kuramata
Kenneth Noland
Richard Prince
Anselm Reyle
Rudolf Stingel
Katja Strunz
Lee Ufan
A group show of the Frank Cohen Collection that explores how a significant group of contemporary artists have responded to Modernism. The exhibition begins at the end of Modernism with two great works from the 1970s by the colour field painter Kenneth Noland. In the post-modern era artists have appropriated this aesthetic. Works by: John M Armleder, Mathias Bengtsson, Dunne & Raby, Gardar Eide Einarsson, Olafur Eliasson and others.
Artists John M Armleder, Mathias Bengtsson, Dunne & Raby, Gardar Eide Einarsson,
Olafur Eliasson, Gregor Hildebrandt, Sergej Jensen, Shiro Kuramata, Kenneth Noland,
Richard Prince, Anselm Reyle, Rudolf Stingel, Katja Strunz, Lee Ufan
The Frank Cohen Collection is delighted to present Minimal Means at Initial Access, a
group show that explores how a significant group of contemporary artists have
responded to Modernism.
The history of Modernism is in part an account of artists gradually reducing the means at
their disposal in order to get closer to an essential truth in art. In painting and
sculpture this led from Impressionism to Cubism and on further to Abstract
Expressionism, Colour Field painting and finally Minimalism.
Concurrently, those artists
influenced by the ready-mades of Marcel Duchamp utilised objects from everyday life and
by changing the context in which they were perceived, turned them into works of art.
Both these trajectories of artistic practice were ways of paring down the basic elements
of art. In doing so the artists were emphasising what was necessary for a work of art
to exist.
This exhibition begins at the end of Modernism with two great works from the 1970s by
the colour field painter Kenneth Noland. In the post-modern era artists have
appropriated this aesthetic. No longer seeking essential truth by reducing form and
subject matter, the artists in Minimal Means play games with the art historical conditions
of Modernism, using the precedents it set as a platform upon which to experiment.
Works by Rudolf Stingel, such as Untitled, 2005, assert a postmodern position and
aesthetic that corresponds with other works in the exhibition, such as Campanula
persicifolia, 2008, by John M Armleder. These works have the appearance of
Modernist paintings but are using the reduced form and aesthetic as part of a wider
project that includes various forms and media. Minimal Means will also showcase
works from Cohen’s contemporary furniture and design collection, such as Pylon
Chair by Tom Dixon and ‘Slice’ Chaise Longue by Mathias Bengtsson.
Always ahead of the trends in the contemporary art market, Frank Cohen has been
collecting contemporary art for over thirty years, and this exhibition at Initial
Access will showcase a part of his collection not before seen in the UK.
Initial Access opened on 19 January 2007, as a space to present exhibitions from
Frank Cohen’s internationally important collection of contemporary art. It is sited
on the outskirts of the millennium city of Wolverhampton, in two refurbished
warehouses that provide 10,000 sq feet of exhibition space. Initial Access presents
different aspects of the Collection in a series of exhibitions curated by David Thorp.
The programme is designed to mount shows of new acquisitions to the collection,
explore themes among works that may not have been seen before and give the
public an opportunity to see more of the collection currently in store.
For further press information and images please contact:
Elizabeth Barrett T +44 (0)20 7183 3577 elizabeth@suttonpr.com
Elisa Ruff T +44 (0)20 7183 3577 elisa@suttonpr.com
Initial Access
Calibre Industrial Park, Wolverhampton
Hours Tuesday–Friday 11am–4pm, Sat.
10am-4pm Admission Free