Solo show
Yvon Lambert is pleased to announce an exhibition of works made from 1962
through 2008 by American artist Robert Barry. The exhibition titled RB 62-08
will include a new major floor piece, several wall text pieces, and
paintings.The exhibition will open with a reception for the artist on
January 8th 2009 from 6 to 8pm and will be on view through February 7th
2009.
Robert Barry (b. 1936), one of the pioneers of conceptualism and minimalism,
has been showing for four decades and is included in the permanent
collections of the world's most visionary museums and foundations
including The Museum of Modern Art, New York; the Hirshhorn Museum and
Sculpture Garden, Washington, DC; The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New
York; the Muse'e d'Orsay, Paris; the Whitney Museum of American
Art, New York; the Musee National D'Art Moderne, Centre George
Pompidou, Paris; the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles and the
National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC.
A major theme in Robert Barry's work is the space between: between
objects,between time, between artist and viewer. In this exhibition a
diptych pairs one panel from 1962 with a new panel created in 2008. Barry
explains that physical space can be seen as a representation of the elapsed
time between the creation of each panel.
Another hallmark of Barry's artistic practice is the idea that an
artwork is as important as the art object itself. Early in his career he
famously observed, Nothing seems to be the most important thing in
the world. The manifestation of this idea has led the artist to work
in a variety of unorthodox and sometimes intangible media: magnetism,
thoughts, ultrasonic sound and inert gases. The poetic Inert Gas Series:
Neon exhibited in RB 62-08 was made in 1969 when the artist returned the gas
into the atmosphere in the Southern Californian hills. The remaining piece
exists as two photographs and accompanying text describing the creation of
the work.
Barry's work also encourages viewer participation, if not physically,
then mentally. Such is the case with the Telepathic Series a
group of works from 1969 represented in RB 62-08 by a series of wall texts.
Phrases such as A Series of Particular Emotions Transmitted Telepathically
and A Secret Desire Transmitted Psychically communicate to the viewer the
artist's actions in creating the artwork.
Yvon Lambert
550 West 21st Street - New York
Tuesday- Saturday : 10am - 6pm
Free admission