Neo Rauch
Walker Evans
Stephen Shore
William Eggleston
Jean-Marc Bustamante
Patrick Faigenbaum
Gabriel Orozco
Damian Ortega
Daniel Faust
Mitch Epstein
Lewis Koch
Bertien van Manen
Carrie Mae Weems
Rachel Harrison
Shomei Tomatsu
Neo Rauch presents six new paintings, that teeter between Surrealism and Social Realism, defying easy interpretation. Viewers are drawn into scenes replete with strange beings and ambiguous landscapes. Hidden in Plain Sight: Contemporary Photographs from the Collection features the work of artists who use the camera to call our attention to the poetic richness latent in ordinary things. Among the artists: Walker Evans, William Eggleston, Jean-Marc Bustamante, Gabriel Orozco, Damián Ortega, Mitch Epstein...
Neo Rauch
Neo Rauch at the Met presents six new paintings made specifically for this
exhibition by the artist Neo Rauch (b. 1960, Leipzig, Germany), one of the most
widely acclaimed painters of his generation. The exhibition - on view from May 22
through September 23, 2007 -is the third in the Museum's series dedicated to artists
at mid-career, following exhibitions featuring Tony Oursler in 2005 and Kara Walker
in 2006.
Shaped by the experience of growing up in East Germany, Rauch's paintings teeter
between Surrealism and Social Realism, defying easy interpretation. Viewers are
drawn into scenes replete with strange beings and ambiguous landscapes. Full of
activity yet mysteriously static in feeling, Rauch's paintings are fantasy painted
as fact, and many of his large-format works are populated by figures that are
connected spatially, yet remain alienated and unaware of each other. With a
distinctive palette of bright acidic colors contrasting with deep shadows, the
artist's paintings conjure up an atmosphere of confused nostalgia and failed
utopias.
Trained at the Hochschule für Grafik und Buchkunst in Leipzig, Rauch continues to
live and work in the city of his birth, and has inspired a younger generation of
painters in Leipzig's thriving artistic community. Rauch's work has been featured in
solo exhibitions at Kunstmuseum Wolfsburg, Germany (2006); Musée d'art contemporain
de Montreal, Canada (2006); Albertina, Vienna, Austria (2004); Saint Louis Art
Museum (2002); and Deutsche Guggenheim, Berlin, Germany (2001), among other museums.
Neo Rauch at the Met is organized by Gary Tinterow, Engelhard Curator in Charge of
the Metropolitan's Department of Nineteenth-Century, Modern, and Contemporary Art.
..........
Hidden in Plain Sight: Contemporary Photographs from the Collection
Hidden in Plain Sight: Contemporary Photographs from the Collection, on view from
May 15 through September 3, 2007, features the work of artists who use the camera to
call our attention to the poetic richness latent in ordinary things. Often
deliberately understated, these photographs are filled with everyday epiphanies,
inviting us to look more closely at the world around us. The exhibition will feature
approximately 35 works by American and international artists, including Walker
Evans, Stephen Shore, William Eggleston, Jean-Marc Bustamante, Patrick Faigenbaum,
Gabriel Orozco, Damián Ortega, Daniel Faust, Mitch Epstein, Lewis Koch, Bertien van
Manen, Carrie Mae Weems, Rachel Harrison, and Shomei Tomatsu.
The photographs featured in Hidden in Plain Sight encourage a heightened awareness
of the fleeting beauty to be found in simple objects and chance occurrences. In his
photographs of empty tree planters, Damián Ortega (b. 1967, Mexico) finds geometric
patterns and entropy in the pavement cracks and sprouting weeds that appear on
barren patches of Mexico City sidewalks. The slightly melancholy photographs of
Jean-Marc Bustamante (French, b. 1952) evoke magical moments in commonplace
settings. In an untitled 1998 photograph from his series Something Is Missing,
Bustamante records a "found sculpture" he discovered on the street: an orderly
newspaper stand with stacks of papers fluttering at the corners.
A 1992 photograph by Carrie Mae Weems (American, b. 1953), taken in Sea Island,
Georgia, depicts a mattress spring mysteriously hanging from a tree - a purposeful
intervention by residents of the local Gullah community, who believe it will ensnare
evil spirits. Rachel Harrison (American, b. 1966), in her Perth Amboy series,
photographed the window of an ordinary-looking house in New Jersey where it was
believed that the face of the Virgin Mary had appeared. The pictures focus on the
accumulated fingerprints left by the faithful as they touched the pane of glass.
A particular focus of the show will be the work of Gabriel Orozco (b. 1962, Mexico),
whose Cemetery (2002), captures an unassuming yet surprising landscape that the
artist encountered on one of his travels: dozens of round terracotta pots, used as
grave markers and receptacles for offerings, lay scattered across on the desert sand
of Timbuktu. Since the 1980s, this peripatetic artist has used photography as a form
of visual note-taking, as well as to document ephemeral sculptures he makes on his
local walks and world travels.
Opening may 21, 2007
Metropolitan Museum
1000 Fifth Avenue 82nd Street - New York