Cristina Guerra Contemporary Art
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Rua Santo Antonio a Estrela, 33
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John Baldessari
dal 5/6/2006 al 2/9/2006

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John Baldessari



 
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5/6/2006

John Baldessari

Cristina Guerra Contemporary Art, Lisboa

Noses & Ears, Etc. An entirely new series of works, comprised of framed three-dimensional digital photographic prints with acrylic paint


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Cristina Guerra Contemporary Art is pleased to announce that John Baldessari, one of the most important and influential American artists to emerge since the 1960s, will be showing NOSES & EARS, ETC., an entirely new series of works, comprised of framed three-dimensional digital photographic prints with acrylic paint. This one-man show is one of the artist’s first in a commercial gallery in the city of Lisbon.

Born in National City, California in1931, John Baldessari was influenced by Dada and Surrealist literary and visual ideas. He rose to prominence in the late1960s when he began combining mass media imagery with language, Pop vigour with Conceptual density. Baldessari, early in his long and much celebrated career, began incorporating layers of found materials (billboard posters, photographs, film stills, bits of conversations) on his plain white canvases. These montages, which result from the juxtaposition, edition and cropping of image and text, served to thwart narrative coherence and play off chance relationships between otherwise discreet elements. His photo-based work was also a means of introducing photography into galleries, in an ongoing attempt to undermine certain taboos.

In 1970, Baldessari cremated most of his pre-1966 paintings. This marked his turn from painting to embrace contemporary strategies of cross-over and collisions between mediums. His subsequent work, nonetheless, remained steeped in the issues of painting. During the 1970s, Baldessari, who had been using snapshots of his hometown, discovered a wealth of images in photo shops. He began “dumpster diving", gathering B-movie film stills, publicity shots and press material. “At a certain point I had these huge folders, each one classified according to a subject matter or genre: people with guns, people kissing, Indians and cowboys falling off horses, getting shot, getting shot with arrows -almost every plot device. Then I cropped the cheap, recycled imagery to give exhausted images new meaning, or at least something other than the original meaning" [John Baldessari in conversation with Jeremy Blake, Artforum, March 2004, p. 163]. This was achieved by gathering these readily available images in grids or freely arranged, multi-panel combinations that could elicit a range of meanings, rather than a single, fixed definition.

By the 1980s, he had abandoned text, turning to found pictures alone as a sufficient means of expounding his composites. Later, he adopted coloured sticker-like dots, painted in acrylic, as a means of erasing the identity of people and flattening the image. Like these previous works, NOSES & EARS, ETC. is a continuation of the artist’s interest in the idea of editing and censoring, questioning and foregrounding “what we leave in and what we leave out" [expression taken from a conversation with Christian Boltanski, entitled “What is Erased", see: http://www.blindspot.com/issue3/baldessari_boltanski.html].

Like the title itself denotes, this new series focuses ears and noses by excising the rest of the face. These over-paintings are a continuation of the artist’s wry game of omission, which has marked his work in an overall sense. Baldessari blocks out the lips, eyes, wrinkles and spots, any telltale features of a person, by over-painting. In doing so, he obscures the face, shattering instant identification or interpretation of these images.

“What I leave out is more important. I want that absence, which creates a kind of anxiety" [Artforum, March 2004]

As Baldessari himself points out, the eye or lips in isolation have extensively been focused in art history, for instance, Man Ray’s much reproduced ‘Lips’ from 1966 or the infamous eye-slicing in ‘Un Chien Andalou’. The nose and ears, inversely, do not readily catch the observer and look strange and uncanny in isolation, somewhat phallic when enlarged.

This series also tells us something of what Baldessari terms “the return of the repressed. The more you try to blot it out, the more it is going to be there" [Artforum, March 2004]. In fact, some of the works in the series are reminiscent of hoods, which heighten the dimension of phantasmagoria, or raising of the spectres, that underpins photography and is extensive to these works.Born the son of an Austrian coal miner and Danish nurse who arrived in America during the Depression, John Baldessari has been living in Santa Monica, California, since 1970. He attended San Diego State University and did post-graduate work at Otis Art Institute and Chouinard Art Institute and U.C. Berkeley. He has received honorary degrees from the National University of Ireland, San Diego State University and Otis Art Institute of the Parsons School of Design.

His remarkable tenure as a teacher at the California Institute of the Arts has influenced generations of artists, such as Matt Mullican, Paul McCarthy and Mike Kelley. John Baldessari’s work has been featured in more than 120 solo exhibitions in the U.S. and Europe and in over 300 group exhibitions. In 2007 he will collaborate with the Kunst Museum Bonn and Bonner Kunstverein, Germany, for an exhibition celebrating musical connections with his work. In 2005, a two-part retrospective of his work was held at the Museum Moderner Kunst Stifting Ludwig Wien and the Kunsthaus Graz in Austria and the Musee' d’Art Contemporain, Nimes. ‘Somewhere Between Almost Right and Not Quite (with Orange)’ took place at the Deutsche Guggenheim in Berlin in 2004/5. Other recent major solo exhibitions were held at the Reykjavik Art Museum, Reykjavik (2001), the Sprengel Museum, Hannover, and the Staatliche Kunstsammlungen Dresden (1999); the Museo d’Arte Moderna e Contemporanea di Trento e Rovereto, Trento, Italy (2000/1); and the Museum fur Gegenwartkunst, Zurich and Witte de With, Rotterdam (1998).

Opening Reception on Tuesday, June 6 at 10 pm

Cristina Guerra Contemporary Art
Rua Santo Anto'nio a' Estrela, 33 1350-291 Lisboa Portugal
Tuesday to Friday 11 am > 8 pm
Saturday 12 pm > 8 pm

IN ARCHIVIO [3]
Joao Paulo Feliciano
dal 27/2/2008 al 28/3/2008

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