As far as the eye can see. The retrospective provides a comprehensive examination of the artist remarkable and cohesive oeuvre by assembling key selections and bodies of work from the full breadth of his production, including works on paper, films, videos, books, posters, public commissions, multiples and audio works. Weiner is one of the key figures associated with the emergence and foundations of Conceptual Art.
As far as the eye can see
The first major retrospective of Lawrence Weiner’s work
organized in the United States, Lawrence Weiner: AS FAR AS THE EYE CAN SEE, opens at
the Whitney Museum of American Art on November 15, 2007, and remains on view through
February 10, 2008. A key figure responsible for the emergence and foundations of
conceptual art in the 1960s, Lawrence Weiner continues exploring possibilities for ways
his art can exist in the world. Co-organized by the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los
Angeles (MOCA) and the Whitney, this landmark exhibition is co-curated by Whitney
Museum Chief Curator and Associate Director for Programs Donna De Salvo and MOCA
Senior Curator Ann Goldstein. Following its Whitney presentation, the exhibition will be on
view at MOCA from April 13 to July 14, 2008.
Lawrence Weiner: AS FAR AS THE EYE CAN SEE is a comprehensive examination of
Weiner's remarkable and cohesive oeuvre, assembling key selections and bodies of work
from throughout his nearly fifty-year career. The exhibition represents the full range of
Weiner's art, from the early Propeller and Removal paintings of the 1960s, to the artist's
renowned "specific and general" works—works using language that have characterized his
art since 1968. Also included are works on paper, films, videos, books, posters, multiples,
and audio works. In conjunction with the exhibition, a series of Weiner’s films will be
screened at New York’s Anthology Film Archives.
As co-curator Donna De Salvo remarks, “By jettisoning the most fundamental notions about
the art object and its dissemination, Lawrence Weiner arrived at a form that has made it
possible for him to insinuate his art into the world—the arena he sees for his work. His
works exist on the façades of buildings, as song lyrics, as tattoos on bodies, and of course
on the walls of galleries. A compilation of these efforts reads more as atlas than
exhibition catalogue.”
Weiner has defined art as "the relationship of human beings to objects and objects to
objects in relation to human beings," and that premise remains at the core of all of his
work. As a pioneer of conceptual art, Weiner began in the 1960s to create works that
were central to the ongoing debate on the nature and meaning of art. Weiner was at the
forefront of a radical shift in which language or text emerged as a primary medium for the
making of art. These artists challenged the “object status” of painting and sculpture,
proposing that the idea and intention of the artist were as important, if not more
important, than the object that resulted.
As co-curator Ann Goldstein writes in the accompanying catalogue: “Weiner’s employment
of language allows the work to be used by its receiver. It is purposely left open for
translation, transference, and transformation; each time the work is made, it is made anew.
Not fixed in time and place, every manifestation and point of reception is different—each
person will use the work differently and find a different relationship to its content.”
This exhibition examines Weiner's work from his first studio-based manifestations (as
Weiner refers to the realization of his works), which were included in his landmark 1968
book STATEMENTS, to later works that address the physical and cultural landscape, and
introduce figures of speech, punctuation, and graphic devices. The installations at both
the Whitney and MOCA will be designed in close collaboration with the artist.
Weiner’s practice expands into the world – from the spaces of the gallery to the streets of
the city. For instance, Weiner’s work is to be found embedded in the streets of Manhattan:
for a Public Art Fund project completed in 2000, he produced nineteen cast-iron manhole
covers running from the West Village to Washington Square Park, Union Square Park, and
Tompkins Square Park. On each manhole cover are the words IN DIRECT LINE WITH
ANOTHER AND THE NEXT.
Since the beginning of his career, Weiner has made films, producing a substantial body of
work, including short, conceptual pieces and feature-length narratives. The films will be
shown in a series of programs at Anthology Film Archives. Further details will be
announced.
Lawrence Weiner was born in the Bronx in 1942 and attended New York City public
schools. He spent the late fifties and early sixties traveling throughout the U.S., Mexico,
and Canada. The first presentation of his work was in Mill Valley, California, in 1960. He
divides his time between a studio in New York and a boat in Amsterdam.
Lawrence Weiner: AS FAR AS THE EYE CAN SEE is accompanied by a comprehensive
catalogue, co-published by MOCA and the Whitney Museum of American Art and produced
in close collaboration with the artist. Designed by award-winning graphic designer Lorraine
Wild, the publication features essays by Liam Gillick, Edward Leffingwell, Dieter Schwarz,
and Gregor Stemmrich, along with exhibition curators Donna De Salvo and Ann Goldstein.
This exhibition was jointly organized by the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York,
and the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles.
Major support has been provided by Glenn Fuhrman and John and Amy Phelan.
Additional support has been provided by Aaron and Barbara Levine.
This exhibition is made possible, in part, by Altria Group, Inc
Image: Lawrence Weiner, Bits & Pieces Put Together to Present a Semblance of a Whole, 1991, language and the materials
referred to, courtesy of Moved Pictures, New York, Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, Minnesota 1994
Press office Whitney Museum of American Art
Stephen Soba, Kira Garcia Tel. (212) 570-3633 Fax (212) 570-4169 pressoffice@whitney.org
The Whitney Museum is located at 945 Madison Avenue, New York City.
Museum hours are: Wednesday, Thursday, Saturday, and Sunday from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m., Friday from 1 p.m. to 9 p.m., closed Monday and Tuesday.