Michele Abeles
Uri Aran
Darren Bader
Antoine Catala
Moyra Davey
Keith Edmier
LaToya
Ruby Frazier
Dan Graham
Renee Green
Wade Guyton
Shadi Habib Allah
Jeff Koons
Nate Lowman
Daniel McDonald
Bjarne Melgaard
John Miller
Takeshi Murata
Virginia Overton
Joyce Pensato
Adrian Piper
Rob Pruitt
R H Quaytman
Tabor Robak
Julian Schnabel
Ryan Sullivan
Alex Gartenfeld
Norman Rosenthal
The exhibition explores the constantly shifting realities and mythologies of New York City. This ambitious intergenerational survey presents the work of twenty-five renowned and emerging New York City artists-each in depth and with important new work being shown-and suggests how they might re-imagine the relationship between their community and the life of the city.
Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac is very pleased to present the exhibition Empire State. New York Art
Now in its Paris Pantin venue, organized by British curator Norman Rosenthal and Miami-based
curator, writer and editor Alex Gartenfeld.
The exhibition explores the constantly shifting realities and mythologies of New York City. This
ambitious intergenerational survey presents the work of twenty-five renowned and emerging New
York City artists – each in depth and with important new work being shown – and suggests how
they might re-imagine the relationship between their community and the life of the city. With
painting, sculpture, photography, video, and installation, the artists in Empire State examine their
city’s enduring relevance to the world at a moment when urban life is being redefined rapidly
everywhere.
Most of the art on view is newly commissioned, complemented by other significant works made in
the past three years. We are delighted to present new paintings and sculptures by Jeff Koons for
the first time in Paris after his acclaimed exhibition at the Palace of Versailles in 2008. Moyra
Davey will create a projection room in the exhibition for Les Goddesses (2011) and Joyce
Pensato will realize one of her signature site specific large-scale wall painting.
“Manhattan is an accumulation of possible disasters that never happen,” wrote celebrated architect
and theorist Rem Koolhaas. For New York City, the most popular disaster myth is that it will be
eclipsed. Yet in the era of globalization and with pundits routinely declaring it in decline, The Big
Apple remains the world’s hegemonic force in the visual arts, with the most diverse concentration
of artists, museums, arts organizations, galleries and public platforms in constant action and
interplay.
The exhibition takes its title from the iconic mythologizing 2009 hip-hop anthem of the same name
by rapper-turned-mogul Jay-Z and musician Alicia Keys, and references Empire, Antonio Negri and
Michael Hardt’s 2000 treatise on American-led global capitalism. In 2013, Empire State will echo
and engage such allegories of America’s socio-economic transition and subsequent shifts in
status, confidence and power.
The artists in Empire State are grounded in institutional critique and studies of media and
economics; they embrace hybridization and cross-disciplinary techniques; and they engage
technology and abstraction to propose new models of expression and interpretation. One example
is Dan Graham’s mirrored pavilions combine Minimalism and architecture to reflect and double the
human form. With the new works, Jeff Koons harnesses incredible technical tools to manifest his
attraction to classicism and Greek and Roman mythology. Michele Abeles’s new photographic
prints incorporate her installation views, as she constantly revises her autobiography according to
her context.
In a new commission, Keith Edmier imagines a monumental sculpture according to the vernacular
of the original Pennsylvania Station, a landmark of New York mythologizing: Designed by McKim,
Mead & White and constructed in 1910 at the height of America’s industrial revolution, Penn
Station was a breathtaking masterpiece of Roman Neo-Classical architecture and a testament to
New York’s position as the de facto trade and culture capital of the New World. It was
ignominiously demolished in 1963 at the height of New York’s craze for all things Modern.
Perhaps most importantly, Empire State emphasizes a genealogy of artists: Confronting an
increasingly corporatized art world spreading globally like a new Byzantium, artists are activating
ever-shifting networks of relationships, collaborations and exchanges across the boundaries of
generation, gender, perspective and technique. R. H. Quaytman will present a work from her
series of portraits of New York artists in a visual expression of the act of networking and the
invisible tracery of power and exchange.
Empire State will be accompanied by a catalogue (Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac/Skira) featuring
extended essays by the curators and by Tom McDonough, John Miller, and Eileen Myles; a visual
essay by Matt Keegan; and original texts on each of the artists by leading critics and curators,
including Vinzenz Brinkmann, Bonnie Clearwater, Kim Conaty, Bruce Hainley, Hans Ulrich Obrist,
Tina Kukielski, and others.
About the Curators
Norman Rosenthal is a celebrated independent curator and critic based in London. He was Director of
Exhibitions at the Royal Academy of Arts from 1977 through 2008. Rosenthal has organized dozens of
critically acclaimed exhibitions, including such era-defining landmark surveys as “A New Spirit of Painting”
(1981) and “Sensation” (1997).
Based in Miami, Alex Gartenfeld is Curator at the Museum of Contemporary Art North Miami, Senior Online
Editor at Art in America and Interview magazines. He has co-founded two independent exhibition and project
spaces in New York, and has organized exhibitions at the Zabludowicz Collection, Team Gallery and Harris
Lieberman.
Opening on Sunday 17 November 2013, 2pm-7pm
Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac Paris Pantin
69, avenue du Général Leclerc, Paris-Pantin
Tuesday – Saturday, 10am to 7pm
Free entry