Nelson imagines returning works from some of the 20 century's greatest sculptors to an environment suggestive of an artist's studio, naturally lit under the gallery's skylight. Works by Pawel Althamer, Louise Bourgeois, Constantin Brancusi, Alberto Giacometti, Sherrie Levine, Henry Moore and Willem de Kooning.
The Whitechapel Gallery launches the first exhibition of works from the V-A-C
collection in the UK, selected by renowned British artist Mike Nelson, on 9
September 2014.
Mike Nelson (b.1967) is a contemporary artist best known for creating
immersive, multi-layered installations. For this display at the Whitechapel
Galley, Nelson imagines returning works from some of the 20 century’s
greatest sculptors to an environment suggestive of an artist’s studio, naturally
lit under the gallery’s skylight.
Nelson has chosen historic and contemporary figurative works by artists
including Pawel Althamer, Louise Bourgeois, Constantin Brâncusi, Alberto
Giacometti, Sherrie Levine, Henry Moore and Willem de Kooning. They will be
displayed on a reclaimed wooden floor filling the space, leaving a metre wide
walkway around the edge of the room, and shown as a mass of modelled
figures on this common ground rather than on plinths or pedestals. Inspired
by a Dieter Roth work, The Floor (Studio-floor from Mosfellsbaer, Iceland),
(1973 -1992), Mike Nelson’s sculptural installation is what he describes as a
‘levelling of sorts, questioning how we look at objects’.
Modern masterpieces such as Constantin Brâncusi’s The First Cry (1917)
dissolved the human form into elliptical shapes, and Alberto Giacometti’s
Femme Debout (1957) elongates a woman’s body into abstraction. These will
go on show alongside rarely seen Kota Reliquary Figures, unique wooden and
metal African forms.
In the display, Nelson draws links between his own work and that of other
artists by displaying works such as Pawel Althamer’s Ognisko (Camp-fire)
(2012), which depicts white figures observing a campfire created from plastic,
metal and resin. Nelson identified the campfire as a recurring motif found in
his own work at various stages in his career for example, Gang of Seven (2013),
an installation made up of debris found on Vancouver beaches. Nelson also
refers back to his own work More things (To the memory of Honoré de
Balzac) (2013) a sculptural environment that hovered between the figurative
and the abstract.
This display highlights the V-A-C collection, Moscow, as part of the
Whitechapel Gallery’s programme of opening up rarely seen collections from
around the world. Following this first presentation, three further exhibitions of
works drawn from the collection will be selected in partnership with three
internationally acclaimed artists, Fiona Banner, Lynette Yiadom-Boakye and
James Richards, over the course of a year. These displays will be on show from 9 December 2014 – 8 March 2015; 17 March – 14 June 2015 with the
fourth and final display launching on 23 June until 30 August 2015. Each
presentation will be accompanied by a unique publication devised by the
guest selector.
The V-A-C collection brings together a range of important art works including
sculptures, paintings and photographs from leading, internationally
recognised artists such as Francis Bacon, Liz Deschenes, Natalia Goncharova,
Wade Guyton, Wassily Kandinsky, Lucy McKenzie, Amedeo Modigliani, Sigmar
Polke to Gerhard Richter, Bridget Riley, Egon Schiele, Dayanita Singh and
Christopher Wool.
The collection is owned by the V-A-C Foundation, a not for profit private
institution founded in Moscow in 2009. This presentation of the V-A-C
collection is part of the Whitechapel Gallery’s ongoing programme opening up
important public and private collections for everyone.
Press Information
For further press information please contact:
Rachel Mapplebeck on 020 7522 7880 or email RachelMapplebeck@whitechapelgallery.org
Anna Jones on 020 7522 7871 or email AnnaJones@whitechapelgallery.org
Whitechapel Gallery
77 – 82 Whitechapel High Street, London
Opening times: Tuesday – Sunday, 11am – 6pm, Thursdays, 11am – 9pm.
Admission free