'Animal Pyramid' is a stack of 17 taxidermy molds rising to 12 feet. The carnivalesque arrangement of these alien creatures made out of amber-hued polyurethane evokes the dichotomy of nature and sport. The persistent themes and ideas in his art appear: the use of the body as material.
Gagosian New York is pleased to present Bruce Nauman’s Animal Pyramid of 1989.
Since the 1960s, Nauman's radical interdisciplinary approach has challenged conventions while producing new methodologies for creating art and meaning. Body and selfhood, the role of language, the phenomena of spatial awareness, and the relationship between artistic process and viewer participation are recurring themes in his art. His rigorous, ascetic approach to the existential dichotomies of life/death, love/hate, pleasure/pain has embraced performance, video, holography, installation, sculpture, and drawing. From the attitudes and forms of his Post-Minimalist and Conceptual work to his most recent sound installations, persistent themes and ideas appear: the use of the body as material; the relationship between image and language; and the generative interaction of positive and negative space.
In 1988, after a hiatus of nearly two decades focused on time-based media, Nauman resumed his work with cast objects. But rather than casting empty space or human forms as before, he turned to readymade molds—in this case, taxidermy molds used in preparing stuffed animals, which he first saw in a local taxidermy shop then procured from a mail-order catalogue.
Animal Pyramid is a stack of seventeen taxidermy molds rising to twelve feet. The carnivalesque arrangement of these alien creatures made out of amber-hued polyurethane evokes the dichotomy of nature and sport: four upside-down foxes crown graduated rows of deer and caribou, eerily featureless—even ambiguous—without their prized pelts and horns. The entire ensemble is visibly cobbled together with wire, the work of a morbid puppeteer. Like the preceding work Carousel (1988)—where dismembered taxidermy forms hang and drag from a steel axis that turns in an agonizing danse macabre—Animal Pyramid disturbs with its vision of carnage submitted to an artificial and bloodless geometric order.
The work’s stemmed violence also probes the unsettling gap between real and surrogate, a common cultural obsession from the fetish objects of West Africa to the dismembered mannequins of Hans Bellmer and Cindy Sherman, and Maurizio Cattelan’s melancholy take on the Bremen Town Musicians. With Animal Pyramid, Nauman's meditations on the fraught human condition within a larger world ecology take shape in the very materials by which living nature is transformed into still life.
In 1990, the Greater Des Moines Public Art Foundation commissioned a cast bronze version of Animal Pyramid. It is installed in the grounds of the Des Moines Art Center, Iowa.
Bruce Nauman was born in 1941 in Fort Wayne, Indiana. His work is represented in public and private collections worldwide. Major solo exhibitions include “Bruce Nauman: Inside Out” Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía (1993–94, traveled to Walker Art Center, Minneapolis; Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles; Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, D.C.; and Museum of Modern Art, New York, through 1995); “Bruce Nauman: Mapping the Studio I (Fat Chance John Cage),” Dia Center for the Arts, New York (2002); “Mapping the Studio,” Museum für Gegenwartskunst, Basel (2002); “Bruce Nauman: Theaters of Experience,” Deutsche Guggenheim, Berlin (2003); "Bruce Nauman: Raw Materials" Unilever Commission, Tate Modern Turbine Hall (2005); “A Rose Has No Teeth: Bruce Nauman in the 1960s,” UC Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive, Berkeley, CA (2007); “Notations/Bruce Nauman: Days and Giorni,” Biennale di Venezia (2009, traveled to Philadelphia Museum of Art; and Museum of Modern Art, New York (through 2010); “Bruce Nauman: Dream Passage,” Hamburger Bahnhof, Berlin (2010); and “Bruce Nauman’s Words on Paper,” Art Gallery of Ontario (2014). His work has been included in the Whitney Biennial (1977, 1985, 1987, 1991, and 1997); and the Venice Biennale (1978, 1980, 1999, 2005, and 2007). Nauman lives and works in Northern New Mexico.
Image: BRUCE NAUMAN, Animal Pyramid, 1989, polyurethane foam, iron, wood, and wire, 144 x 84 x 96 inches (366 x 213 x 244 cm) © 2015 Bruce Nauman/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York
Press Contact:
Andy Ptaschinski, andy@bluemedium.com
Newlin Tillotson, newlin@bluemedium.com
Opening: Thursday, January 29th, from 6:00 to 8:00pm
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