Ida Applebroog's subject is a sustained enquiry into the polemics of human relations. She appropriates mainstream media in innovative ways and transforms her canvases into structural elements, effectively questioning the viewer's active involvement in her works. Dieter Roth presents a monumental project, 'Reykjavik Slides': 31.035 slides shown simultaneously on multiple projectors.
Ida Applebroog
Hauser & Wirth is proud to present an exhibition
of major works by the American artist Ida
Applebroog. Describing herself as a 'generic
artist', Applebroog's subject is a sustained
enquiry into the polemics of human relations.
She appropriates mainstream media in
innovative ways and transforms her canvases
into structural elements, effectively questioning
the viewer's active involvement in her works.
Applebroog first came to attention in the 1970s
with her 'comic strip' works, which presented
a succession of identical images in window-
like cellular structures. In the mid-1980s, these
paintings evolved into altarpiece constructions,
joining several different sized canvases. In the
early 1990s, Applebroog reached a turning point
in her career with the 'Marginalia' series. With 'Marginalia', Applebroog's joining of images takes on a precarious
spatial dynamic. Balanced on top of one another, leaning against walls or laid flat on the floor, the canvases are
conceived as fragments of room-sized installations. The conventional clothing of Applebroog's subjects marks
them out as everymen or women, yet their multiple parts tell of psychoses: a man holding a baby has his arms
strapped so that there is little else he can do; a woman clasps two guns, only to have a third held between
her legs. 'When I work with canvases,' Applebroog states, 'I work with three-dimensional structures. It's about
structures, it's about stagings'. The installed 'Marginalia' works hold the viewer at their centre, their appearance
dependent on where one stands.
In 'Monalisa', the staging of images is taken
further. Numerous drawings are latticed together
on a wooden scaffold creating a house-like
structure. The drawings are digitally reworked
versions of Applebroog's 'Vagina Drawings' – a
group of drawings originally made in 1969 when
the artist spent hours in the 'little sanctuary' of the
bathroom.
Inside the house is 'Monalisa' – a painting of a
giant doll-like figure, whose lumpy, blood red
body courts the viewer with open legs and
staring eyes. The construction recalls Duchamp's
infamous 'Étant Donnés', which was first
exhibited in 1969, the same year Applebroog
began making her series of 'Vagina Drawings'.
'Caleb', Applebroog's most recent work, similarly confronts the
viewer with multiple images of a single body. Its starting point, a
tiny sculpted figurine, is photographed and digitally manipulated in
a technique Applebroog names 'Photogenetics'. In these physical
permutations, Applebroog tests how little is needed to create a
person, and what we, as observers, are prepared to recognise
and accept.
Ida Applebroog was born in 1929 in the Bronx and currently
lives and works in Manhattan. Her work has been the subject of
numerous exhibitions including a retrospective at the Corcoran
Gallery of Art, Washington DC in 1998. Her art is in the collections
of major American museums including The Museum of Modern
Art, New York; Guggenheim Museum, New York; and Whitney
Museum of Art, New York, amongst others. In 2009, Applebroog
received the 'Anonymous Was A Woman Award'. She is also the
recipient of the College Art Association Distinguished Art Award for
Lifetime Achievement, an Honorary Doctorate of Fine Arts at New
School for Social Research / Parsons School of Design and she
received a MacArthur Foundation Fellowship in 1998.
A symposium on Applebroog's work, including discussions led by Jon Bird, Professor of Art and Critical Theory
at Middlesex University; Briony Fer, Professor in History of Art at University College London; Tamar Garb, Durning
Lawrence Professor in the History of Art, University College London; and critic, curator and writer Elisabeth
Lebovici, will take place on Saturday 19 March at University College London.
Please visit the gallery's website, http://www.hauserwirth.com, for further details and information on ticket availability.
About Hauser & Wirth
Hauser & Wirth is an international gallery, founded in Zurich in 1992 by Iwan and Manuela Wirth and Ursula
Hauser. In 1996 the Zurich gallery opened in the former Löwenbräu brewery building, along with other
contemporary art galleries, Kunsthalle Zürich, and Migros Museum für Gegenwartskunst Zürich.
In 2003, Hauser & Wirth opened
Hauser & Wirth London on Piccadilly
in an historic building designed by
Sir Edwin Lutyens, adding a new and
energetic dimension to London's
growing importance as an international
art centre. Hauser & Wirth's outdoor
sculpture programme, inaugurated in
September 2009, is located behind the
Piccadilly gallery in Southwood Garden,
St James's Church. In 2006, Hauser
& Wirth at Colnaghi was created on
London's Old Bond Street. Hauser &
Wirth New York opened to the public on the
Upper East Side of Manhattan in September
2009. In September 2010, Hauser & Wirth
re-located their Zurich space to a new
temporary location at Hubertus Exhibitions
while the Löwenbräu building undergoes
major renovation.
In October 2010 Hauser & Wirth opened its
new gallery at 23 Savile Row. Offering 15,000
square feet of exhibition space, the gallery
provides an outstanding setting for larger
exhibitions and more expansive installations.
In addition, 7,000 square feet of the building's
first floor will be developed for an extensive
library and archive and new offices.
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Dieter Roth
Reykjavik Slides (31,035) Every View of a City
Throughout his career, Dieter Roth worked with great breadth and diversity. He was a composer, musician, poet and writer as well as an artist, consciously obliterating categories and hierarchies and, through his collaborations with other artists, subverting the principle of authorship. Hauser & Wirth is delighted to present Roth’s monumental project ‘Reykjavik Slides’, on view at Hauser & Wirth London, Savile Row until 30 April 2011.
Featuring 31,035 slides shown simultaneously on multiple projectors, ‘Reykjavik Slides’ was inspired by the distinctive character of Icelandic architecture and documents every building in the capital. Made with the assistance of Pál Magnússon and the artist’s two sons, Björn and Karl, the work is a comprehensive survey, drawing one’s attention to the subject matter of the project, rather than the role of the artist.
In his work from the 1960s and 1970s, Roth liberated himself from formal and linguistic conventions. He pursued the belief that life was art, achieving this through a decision to give all things, however insignificant or unappealing, equal importance. With projects such as ‘SNOW’ (1963 – 69), a book project that involved the photographing and experimental printing of every object with which Roth came into contact; and ‘Flacher Abfall (Flat Waste)’ (1975-76 / 1992), a collection of neatly and chronologically archived items less than a third of an inch thick, Roth’s strict avoidance of hierarchy developed a unique preservation of the ephemera of his life. These projects advanced a poetic of everyday meaningfulness: ‘every slip of paper is touching,’ Roth said; ‘each day or thing sings its song’.
With ‘Reykjavik Slides’, Roth used this same didactic approach to create an homage to Iceland. The work’s numerous images present an act of dedication to the singularity of Reykjavik, Roth’s home since 1957 and, in seeing every building as worthy of admiration, Roth allowed life itself to communicate as art.
Image: Marginalia (strapped man), 1992. Oil and resin on canvas, 3 panels 71.1 x 122.6 x 7.8 cm / 28 x 48 1/4 x 3 1/8 in. Photo: Emily Poole
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+ 44 (0) 20 7183 3577
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+ 44 (0) 20 7255 8990
press@hauserwith.com
Opening: Wednesday 16 March 6 – 8 pm
Hauser & Wirth London
Savile Row (South Gallery) - London
Gallery hours: Tuesday to Saturday, 10 am – 6 pm