F a c t S h e e t |
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Exhibition: |
Singular Forms (Sometimes Repeated): Art from 1951 to the Present
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Venue: |
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum 1071 Fifth Avenue, New York City |
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Dates: |
March 5 May 19, 2004
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Press Preview: |
Thursday, March 4, 10 a.m. 1 p.m.
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Overview: |
The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum will present Singular
Forms (Sometimes Repeated): Art from 1951 to the Present, the
third in a series of exhibitions highlighting the museum's world-renowned
collection. In summer 2003, the Guggenheim presented
From Picasso to Pollock: Classics of Modern Art, an exhibition
celebrating the history of the avant-garde from early Modernism
through Abstract Expressionism; and with Moving Pictures in
2002, the Guggenheim showcased its important concentration of
contemporary photography and video. Drawing on the
Guggenheim's exceptional holdings of Minimalist painting and
sculpture, Singular Forms examines the impulse toward reduction,
restraint, and lucidity in postwar art.
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Content: |
The exhibition, which will fill the museum's entire Frank Lloyd
Wright Rotunda and adjacent Tower galleries, begins with Robert
Rauschenberg's historic White Painting (1951), a stark,
monochromatic canvas that invites the audience's participation by
reflecting the shadows it casts in a room. This seminal work
establishes twin trajectories in the development of contemporary
art: the elimination of all extraneous details to achieve an art of
pure, essential form; and the attention to issues of perception,
viewing context, and bodily engagement.
After a prologue including other examples of radical, monochrome paintings by Ellsworth Kelly, Ad Reinhardt, and Frank Stella, the exhibition explores how these parallel artistic strategies were manifest in Minimalist and Conceptual art of the 1960s and 1970s through the work of Carl Andre, Dan Flavin, Donald Judd, Sol LeWitt, Brice Marden, Agnes Martin, John McCracken, Robert Ryman, and Lawrence Weiner, among others. Minimalism's impact on subsequent generations of contemporary artists will be a major component of Singular Forms. The movement's immediate successor, Postminimalism, utilized a deliberate paucity of formal means to explore a range of concerns including process, the dematerialization of the object, the performative nature of art, and the structural properties of light. Artists such as Robert Irwin, Richard Long, Bruce Nauman, Richard Serra, James Turrell, and Douglas Wheeler are included in this section. During the last two decades, many artists schooled in the deconstructivist tendencies of Postmodernism—such as Allan McCollum, Robert Gober, Roni Horn, and Felix Gonzalez-Torres—resuscitated Minimalism as a style, infusing its unitary, nonreferential forms with content to bring to the fore trenchant cultural issues. The exhibition concludes with recent work that shares much of the look of classic Minimalist art, but uses it to communicate deeply personal, political, or poetic messages. |
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Organization: |
The exhibition is organized by Nancy Spector, Curator of
Contemporary Art, and Lisa Dennison, Deputy Director and Chief
Curator, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum. The installation is
designed by Michael Gabellini of Gabellini Associates.
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Artists in Exhibition: |
Carl Andre, Jo Baer, Larry Bell, James Lee Byars, Walter De Maria, Dan Flavin, Liam Gillick, Robert Gober, Felix Gonzalez-Torres, Peter Halley, Damien Hirst, Roni Horn, Callum Innes, Robert Irwin, Donald Judd, Ellsworth Kelly, Koo Jeong-a, Joseph Kosuth, Wolfgang Laib, Sherrie Levine, Sol LeWitt, Glenn Ligon, Richard Long, Robert Mangold, Piero Manzoni, Brice Marden, Agnes Martin, Allan McCollum, John McCracken, Robert Morris, Bruce Nauman, Roman Opalka, Robert Rauschenberg, Charlesw Ray, Ad Reinhardt, Gerhardt Richter, Dorothea Rockburne, Robert Ryman, Karin Sander, Richard Serra, Tony Smith, Ettore Spalletti, Frank Stella, Rudolf Stingel, Hiroshi Sugimoto, James Turrell, Meg Webster, Lawrence Weiner, Douglas Wheeler, Rachel Whiteread.
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Publication: | The exhibition will be accompanied by a catalogue that examines how the deployment of elemental forms has extended well beyond the visual arts. Filmmakers, choreographers, musicians, designers, and architects (often in tandem or in collaboration with artists) have sought ways to redefine their mediums through the intensive reduction of their formal means. Essays devoted to each of these disciplines will demonstrate how Minimalist tendencies pervade popular culture today. The catalogue is designed by 2 x 4, New York. |
GENERAL INFORMATION: HOURS AND ADMISSION: |
212 423-3500 Sat. - Wed. 10 a.m. - 5:45 p.m.; Fri. 10 a.m. - 8 p.m.; closed Thurs. $15 adults, $10 students/seniors |
December 10, 2003 FOR INFORMATION: Betsy Ennis/Jennifer Russo Public Affairs Telephone: 212 423-3840 email: publicaffairs@guggenheim.org |