Onnasch Collection. The exhibition focuses on the period between 1950 and 1970 and features significant works from the Onnasch Collection, including iconic examples of Pop Art, Fluxus, Colorfield, Assemblage, Minimalism and Abstract Expressionism from the New York School of Art.
Throughout the autumn, Hauser
& Wirth is honoured to devote all
three of its London galleries to a
presentation of works from the
collection of Reinhard Onnasch.
A celebration of Onnasch's
longstanding passion for art and
collecting, 'Re-View: Onnasch
Collection' is curated by Paul
Schimmel, a post-war scholar and the
newly announced Partner of Hauser
Wirth & Schimmel. The exhibition
focuses on the period between 1950
and 1970, which saw the birth of
some of the most important artistic
movements of the 20th century. It
will feature significant works from
the Onnasch Collection, including
iconic examples of Pop Art, Fluxus,
Colorfield, Assemblage, Minimalism
and Abstract Expressionism from
the New York School of Art, many
of which have never been presented
before in London.
'This is an unusually diverse collection rich in its strong commitment to both American and
European art. It shows a uniquely open-minded and exploratory approach to collecting
that is incredibly rare and forms a stunningly diverse view of the currents and counter-
currents of this era.'
– Paul Schimmel
Reinhard Onnasch (born in Germany in 1939) was one of the first Germans to open a
gallery in New York following World War II. He introduced German artists such as Dieter
Roth and Hanne Darboven to American audiences, American artists such as Morris
Louis, Claes Oldenburg and Kenneth Noland to German audiences, and was one of the
earliest advocates of the American artist, Edward Kienholz. Onnasch was attracted to the
individual personalities of an artist's work, a quality that led him to build an extensive and
eclectic collection with a multitude of themes and stories coursing through it.
'Re-View: Onnasch Collection' begins in Hauser & Wirth's Piccadilly gallery with an
exploration of Assemblage, collage and the combine, looking specifically at the quasi-
area between sculpture, the performative and the cinematic that these works occupy.
The journey starts with Robert Rauschenberg's 'Pilgrim' (1960). 'Pilgrim' incorporates
an ordinary wooden chair into the composition of an abstract painting, encapsulating
the pivotal method of Rauschenberg's combine paintings.
The centrepiece of the presentation at Piccadilly is the work of the self-taught
American artist, Edward Kienholz. Kienholz's early, surreal sculptural assemblages
highlight the artist's penchant for wrestling with difficult subject matter and creating
sharp social criticism. For example, 'The Future as an Afterthought' (1962) confronts
the horrors of nuclear war by assembling a mass of dismembered baby dolls in the
silhouette of a mushroom cloud.
In the American Room of the Piccadilly gallery, the rich tradition of Assemblage is
further explored through works by George Brecht, Christo and Dieter Roth. Their work
emphasises the banal, completely disregarding the boundaries between so-called
'high art' and everyday life. They embraced the accident and the unpredictability of
their unstable materials, including food. Only the red caps peep out of Roth's 'Zwerge
(Dwarves)' (1970), a block of garden gnomes immersed in chocolate, a foodstuff once
pleasurable that, over time, has become revolting.
The exhibition continues in Savile Row where it is divided into two sections. The north
gallery focuses on the New York School of the 1950s and 1960s, including works
by Clyfford Still made during what is widely considered to be his most influential
period, when he moved to New York from California. A vanguard of the Abstract
Expressionists, Still created insistently vertical compositions akin to the sublime works
of Mark Rothko and Barnett Newman.
The north gallery will also feature artists such as Morris Louis and Kenneth Noland,
artists associated with the next phase in the New York School of Art: Colorfield and
geometric abstraction. The corners of Morris Louis' monumental paintings from his
iconic 'Unfurled' series (1960 – 1961) are framed with streams of unmixed paint,
a testament to the notion of purity central to the Colorfield movement. Likewise,
Noland's early paintings on view at Hauser & Wirth draw upon European abstraction
and the language of the Russian Constructivists using the direct application of colour
seen in Morris Louis' paintings.
The presentation in the
south gallery explores
the emergence and
development of Pop
Art, looking particularly
at works by artists
such as Jim Dine and
Claes Oldenburg that
pay homage to the
painterliness of the
New York School.
These express a
fascination with a
popular culture definedby mass production and consumption
and its presence in day-to-day life through
magazines, advertisements and ordinary
items. For example, Oldenburg's 'Three-Way
Plug, Model' belongs to the earliest group of
the artist's large-scale projects, magnifying
everyday objects to fantastical proportions.
The candy-colour palette of the cartoon-like
paintings of William Nelson Copley and John
Wesley, also on view in the south gallery,
are further examples of a post-modern
investigation into the common object.
The final rooms of the exhibition look
at Minimalist and Conceptual Art – two
movements arising almost simultaneously
with Pop Art – through works by artists
such as Dan Flavin and Richard Serra. Two
weighty, steel plates balance precariously,
propped up against each other in
the corner. The sculpture, Serra's 'Do it' (1983), speaks to the formal geometric
abstractions of Minimalist Art, whilst accentuating and re-framing the viewer's
experience of sculptural volume and space. 'Do it' brings the exhibition full circle. It
shares an affinity of latent violence and danger implicit in Kienholz's works and, like
Kienholz's work, speaks to the attitude of distrust from which American art of this
period emerged, whilst expressing the vitality shared by these works.
Throughout the duration of the show, Hauser & Wirth will be hosting a varied
programme of public events and educational screenings. For details on the
programme, please visit the gallery's website: www.hauserwirth.com.
Press Contact:
Melissa Emery
melissa@suttonpr.com
+44 207 183 3577
Maria de Lamerens
marial@hauserwirth.com
+44 207 255 8990
Opening: Thursday 19 September 6 – 8 pm
Hauser & Wirth
196A Piccadilly - London W1J 9DY
Tuesday to Saturday, 10 am – 6 pm
Hauser & Wirth
23 Savile Row - London W1S 2ET
Tuesday to Saturday, 10 am – 6 pm