Sadie Coles
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Andrea Zittel
dal 24/3/2014 al 30/5/2014

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Andrea Zittel



 
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24/3/2014

Andrea Zittel

Sadie Coles, London

Physical Matter Reality. The exhibition presents a substantial body of recent work encompassing sculptures, textiles and gouaches on paper. Zittel's differently executed surfaces evoke manifold types of physical field, including walls, floors and furnishings.


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Andrea Zittel’s 2014 exhibition at Sadie Coles HQ presents a substantial body of recent work encompassing sculptures, textiles and gouaches on paper.

Zittel’s differently executed surfaces – woven, painted, or sculptural – evoke manifold types of physical field, including canvases, walls, floors and furnishings. They also offer metaphors for the multifarious ‘planes’ of human experience. These latest planar works reflect the artist’s enduring interest in the porous boundaries between distinct modes or genres – whether abstraction and figuration, or the decorative and the functional. Rather than seeking to deconstruct categories and taxonomies, Zittel adopts a strategy of careful syncretism: she asserts the importance of categories, pointing to their vital role in assigning psychological and social meaning to things. Like Venn diagrams, then, her works roll together diverse concepts (relating variously to art and life) while asserting the necessary divisions between them.

Planar Pavilion revolves around a free-standing architectural structure composed of rectangular planes. Variegated in texture and colour, these surfaces function – like proverbial ‘blank canvases’ – as open-ended and amorphous sites. While interlocking physically, they also slip between myriad associations and resonances. As a three-dimensional matrix, the structure echoes both Constructivist sculpture and – in its juxtaposition of metal and wood – the sleek and simple finishes of post-war interior design.

Mirroring the structure’s planar composition are seven hand-woven textiles, and one carpet suspended on the gallery wall. These are similarly cross-disciplinary – operating as paintings, sculptures, textiles and functional objects. Their woven segments connote artisanship and handcraft, while the sheet metal stands for mass manufacturing. Zittel teases apart the concept of a ‘picture plane’ by offsetting floor and wall-based pieces, invoking both the verticality of paintings and the horizontality of carpets. Through this doubleness – a straddling of ‘art’ and ‘life’ – the works reflect something of contemporary culture’s double-edged attraction to consumable art objects – our simultaneous desire for beautiful objects with which we can intimately engage on a day-to-day level, and, on the other hand, for objects that are charged with the authority of art history and ideology. Also on show is a series of gouache and watercolour studies for these rectangular fields. The works on paper both represent planes and, as sections of paper, constitute planes per se.

This defining quality of Zittel’s art arises from its proximity to her wider existence. Over the last twenty years she has used the articles of day-to-day life – food, furniture, clothing, shelter – as the basis for her work. Her practice, she explains, “plays out through the act of daily living, and examines how psychological structures, belief systems, social values, and rules are manifested as physical objects that we create around ourselves.” Accordingly, her new planar compositions enact a philosophy of real-life objects and their associated rituals (from table tops to paper to sports fields – all sites of human interaction, physical or psychological).

In a series of works titled Bench (After Judd), Zittel pays tribute to Donald Judd’s Bench series, structures that she has long been fascinated with because of their ability to confuse the role of the horizontal surface – functioning at once as benches, tables and raised ‘flooring’. The Hard Carpet series meanwhile presents sheet metal “carpets” which nod to the floor sculptures of Carl Andre, works which similarly collapse the space between viewing and experiencing.

By conflating different kinds of domestic surface, Zittel produces multi-vocal objects. Their tactile surfaces, intricate facture and conceptual allusiveness range far beyond Minimalism. Indeed, Zittel pulls from a panoramic range historical precedents. Her act of turning the everyday into artistic practice, from Allan Kaprow’s treatise of “performing life,” to the diagrammatic forms of the Bauhaus school, whose combination of art, craft, design and architecture prefigures her own multifaceted output.

Andrea Zittel (b. 1964) has exhibited internationally. Recent solo shows include Lay of my Land, BALTIC Centre for Contemporary Art, Gateshead, UK (2012); Lay of my Land, Magasin 3 Stockholm Konsthall, Stockholm (2011); A-Z Habitable Island, Indianapolis Museum of Art, Indianapolis (IN), USA (2010); Andrea Zittel: Between Art and Life, Palazzo Pitti, Florence, Italy (2010); Production Site: The Artist's Studio Inside-Out at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago; single strand, forward motion at Andrea Rosen Gallery, New York, in 2009; a retrospective at the Schaulager Basel, Andrea Zittel, in 2008; and Small Liberties at the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, in 2006. From 2005-7 she had a major North American touring show, Critical Space, at the Contemporary Arts Museum, Houston, the New Museum of Contemporary Art, New York, Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo, The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, and Vancouver Art Gallery, British Columbia, Canada. Andrea Zittel was included in the Whitney Biennial in 2004 and 1995.

For further information please contact the gallery at +44 (0)20 74938611 or press@sadiecoles.com

Sadie Coles HQ
62 Kingly Street London W1
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Andrea Zittel
dal 24/3/2014 al 30/5/2014

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