Robert Crumb
Mike Kelley
Jim Nutt
Peter Saul
H.C. Westermann
Christiaan Braun
Unlike Gerrit Komrij
Harry Mulisch
Queen Beatrix
Work by Robert Crumb, Mike Kelley, Jim Nutt, Peter Saul and H.C. Westermann. The exhibition fills 17 galleries and is conceived and organised by Christiaan Braun: He wanted to introduce in Holland a so far neglected movement in American art, which depicts life in an aesthetically uncommon, confronting manner. This resulted in a selection of work by the five artists.
Work by Robert Crumb, Mike Kelley, Jim Nutt, Peter Saul and H.C. Westermann
The exhibition fills 17 galleries and is conceived and
organised by Christiaan Braun. Braun is well known in the
art world for his striking exhibitions in the former Museum
Overholland on the Museum Square in Amsterdam and, for
the past two years, in Kabinet Overholland at the Stedelijk
Museum. He has also been closely involved with the
Museum of Modern Art in New York for some years.
Unlike Gerrit Komrij, Harry Mulisch and Queen Beatrix, who
were invited to present their choice from the Stedelijk's
collection, Braun has devised a free exhibition concept. He
wanted to introduce in Holland a so far neglected
movement in American art, which depicts life in an
aesthetically uncommon, confronting manner. This resulted
in a selection of work by five artists: Robert Crumb, Mike
Kelley, Jim Nutt, Peter Saul and H.C. Westermann.
Born in 1943, Robert Crumb's reputation for his recalcitrant
comix dates from the sixties. He is the spiritual father of
several well-known comic-strip characters, including Fritz
the Cat, Angelfood McSpade and Mr. Natural. He has also
been involved in the publication of numerous magazines,
such as Zap, Arcade, Weirdo and Hup!. In the opinion of
many American artists Crumb's drawings break new ground
and still exerts a strong influence. Eye Infection presents a
selection from his sketchbook drawings of the sixties and a
number of complete comic- strips. His exhibit fills the Print
Room at the Stedelijk.
The Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art has
provided the impressive installation Pay for your Pleasure
by Mike Kelley (1954). Dating from 1988, it consists of 42
lifesize portraits of historical philosophers and poets,
accompanied by quotes on creativity and criminality.
Wherever the installation is exhibited, it ends with a
self-portrait of a local criminal which becomes part of the
work at the end of the show. The 56- year-old Dutchman
Jan-Willem van E., who has spent 28 years in prison, has
been chosen to succeed the American serial-killer John
Wayne Gacy. THe works on paper in Eye Infection by Mike
Kelley, who has never shown before in the Stedelijk, come
from the Overholland collection and other European
collections.
The cross-section of the work of Chicago-based Jim Nutt
(1938) in Eye Infection covers the period from 1965 to
2001. Some fifty drawings and twenty-five paintings,
mainly from American collections, have been selected for
the exhibition. A number of Nutt's drawings were on view
in last year's presentation Face to Face in Kabinet
Overholland.
Peter Saul (1934) is represented in Eye Infection with
forty paintings dating from 1960 to 2001 and chosen from
Dutch, French and American collections. Work by Saul,
who spent two years in the Netherlands in the late fifties,
was selected for the 'New Realism' exhibition in the
Minicipal Museum of The Hague in 1964.
A major retrospective of sculpture by H.C. Westermann
(1922-1981) is currently touring the United States. Eye
Infection complements this survey with more than a
hundred works on paper. Most of them are drawings sent
by the artist between 1961 and 1978 to his former gallerist
Allan Frumkin, and include drawings for the sculptures in
the current American retrospective. In Eye Infection four
'Death Ships' conveys an impression of Westermann's
sculpture.
Eye Infection is accompanied by a richly illustrated 208-
page book published by the Stedelijk Museum in
association with Richter Verlag in Dusseldorf, with a
preface by the Stedelijk's director Rudi Fuchs and an
extensive introduction by Robert Storr, curator of modern
art at the Museum of Modern Art, New York (English, ca.
NLG 85.- ).The texts are already available to the press.
The Stedelijk Museum Bulletin no. 6/2001 (out on
November 2) contains interviews with Crumb, Kelley, Nutt
and Saul.
A recent and unexpected important contribution from
eleven Dutch private collectors has made Eye Infection
possible.
The Stedelijk Museum is open daily: 11.00 am - 5.00 pm (Closed on January 1)
Director: R.H.Fuchs
Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam
Paulus Potterstraat 13 P.O. Box 75082 1070 AB Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Phone: +31 20 5732911, Fax: +31 20 5732789