Isabel Nolan
What remains of an occasion that had not lasted.
2013
mild steel and PU satin lacquer, archival pigment print on Hahnemühle paper, framed
sculpture:
116 1/8 x 225 1/4 x 21 5/8 in (295 x 572 x 55 cm)
photograph:
16 15/16 x 22 7/16 in (43 x 57 cm)
IN4767
Richard Artschwager
Table (Drop Leaf)
2008
formica on wood
30 x 22 x 44 in
76.2 x 55.9 x 111.8 cm
RA4789
Adam McEwen
Rolldown Gate
2012
graphite
100 3/4 x 45 1/2 x 14 3/16 in
256 x 115.6 x 36 cm
AME4808
Dan Colen and Nate Lowman
Lean on me
2008
aluminum rims, straps, clamps and saxophone cleaner
23 x 91 x 11 in
58.4 x 231.1 x 27.9 cm
DC4787
Gavin Turk
Brillo 6
2003
painted bronze
19 5/16 x 17 11/16 x 11 in
49.1 x 44.9 x 27.9 cm
TURK4785
Richard Artschwager
Untitled (For the Black Beauty)
1983
formica on wood
47 x 26 1/4 x 6 in
119.4 x 66.7 x 15.2 cm
Signed and dated on verso
PP0569
Blair Thurman
Spokin’ 4”
2010
acrylic on canvas
dimensions variable
BT4784
Gavin Turk
Flat Tyre
2013
painted bronze
22 x 25 1/4 x 7 7/8 in
56 x 64 x 20 cm
edition 1/8
TURK4782
Ciprian Muresan
Dead Weight
2013
etchings, plywood, mahogany
24 x 28 x 24 in
61 x 71.1 x 61 cm
CM4807
Martin Kippenberger
Untitled (A Man and His Golden Arm)
1994
bronze, plexiglass and wood
bronze: 26 9/16 x 39 3/4 x 2 9/16 in (67.5 x 101 x 6.5 cm)
wood box construction: 26 1/4 x 15 11/16 x 4 3/16 in (66.6 x 39.8 x 10.7 cm)
crate: 11 13/16 x 29 1/8 x 2 9/16 in (30 x 74 x 109 cm)
edition 4/6
stenciled with artist's name, title, date and numbered 'MARTIN KIPPENBERGER 1994 4/6' (on crate)
MK4401
Justin Adian
I
2013
oil enamel and spray paint on canvas and ester foam
50 x 15 x 8 1/2 in
127 x 38.1 x 21.6 cm
JA4770
Isabel Nolan
The Invisible Mirror
2009
balsa, jesmonite, paint
26 1/2 x 22 1/2 x 1 1/8 in
67 x 57 x 3 cm
IN4791
Richard Artschwager
Landscape with Median
2011
acrylic, charcoal and laminate on board
35 1/2 x 49 3/4 in
90.2 x 126.4 cm
RA3830
Sculpture after Artschwager
September 12 - October 26, 2013
David Nolan Gallery is pleased to present Sculpture after Artschwager – an exhibition which examines the diverse legacy of American artist, Richard Artschwager (1923-2013). On view from September 12 through October 26, the show brings together a group of artists whose work testifies a relationship to his highly original output.
Artschwager came of age as an artist during the early 1960s when a new generation of sculptors were having their first exhibitions in New York City. Notable among these were Robert Morris and Donald Judd, whose measured geometric forms would eventually become labeled under “minimalism”. Artschwager exhibited alongside these artists in a 1966 sculpture survey at the Jewish Museum, though his work – a sculpture of a table, rendered in formica – was set apart for its kitsch materials and light-hearted humor. This playfulness and humanity, which runs throughout Artschwager’s practice, is what distinguishes him from many of the artists who were making work in wake of modernism.
In this exhibition, we assess a number of Artschwager’s themes and formal innovations, which we trace through a variety of younger artists who are working currently. One exception is a sculpture by Martin Kippenberger (1953-1997), which was first shown in an exhibition entitled A Man and His Golden Arm (in our SoHo gallery) in 1994. This work is comprised of a wall-mounted wood and bronze relief affixed with 34 colored objects. On the floor below is a shipping crate, whose unusual proportions are designed to accommodate the piece above. This self-conscious announcement of the work of art as a commodity relates to a concurrent body of work in Artschwager’s practice (which, by coincidence, was presented the same year at another gallery in New York) wherein finely crafted wooden crates confounded the typical expectation of “art”, offering a witty take on the art market and the impulse to collect.
Artschwager’s groundbreaking discovery in the 1960s was the use of commercial-grade products as possible materials in art. Many of his paintings made use of Celotex (designed for ceiling insulation), which lent a peculiar patterning to his pictorial surfaces. The use of formica was another interesting innovation, as it involved the transfer of a two-dimensional surface – often a photographic representation of wood – onto a three-dimensional object. This relationship is developed by British artist, Gavin Turk (b. 1967) whose bronze sculptures of ordinary objects (a cardboard box, a car tire) are meticulously oil-painted, in effect re-animating the traditional idea of the “trompe-l’oeil” within in a three-dimensional realm.
Gavin Turk has described “the overt recognition of what we are looking at” in relation to Artschwager’s sculpture: recurring objects – tables, doors, mirrors or a basket – are articulated thorough stylization and an economy of means, often to a point of caricature. Jennifer Gross characterizes these objects as “protagonists in Artschwager’s pictorial/spatial drama” which exist in “a world of surreal banality through which he thoroughly investigated the boundaries of a room inhabited by familiar things”. This exhibition extends on this spatial drama, casting various uncanny objects from everyday life into an unusual stage show. Adam McEwen’s (b. 1965) Rolldown Gate could be a conceptual stand-in for an Artschwager door – instantly recognizable, but also surprising – while Isabel Nolan’s (b. 1974) Invisible Mirror re-invokes Artschwager’s versions of the mirror motif.
Towards the end of his career, Artschwager turned his focus to images of an open road leading out to a horizon. Blair Thurman (b. 1961) touches on this theme, as do Nate Lowman (b. 1979) and Dan Colen (b. 1979) in a collaborative piece. In each of these works, road imagery is enlisted in the making of highly original sculptures.
Finally, the exhibition introduces the work of Justin Adian (b. 1976), whose unusual wall-mounted sculptures recall Artschwager’s radical “blps”, which, seemingly useless, appear in unexpected places. Adian’s sculpture – essentially a painted canvas, stretched over a strangely shaped support – resides in the corner of the room (a favored placement for Artschwager). Its brightly keyed yellow was also an important color in Artschwager’s work, featuring in the formica pieces of the early 1960s and in the wild and imaginative landscapes drawn at the end of his life.
RICHARD ARTSCHWAGER
JUSTIN ADIAN
DAN COLEN / NATE LOWMAN
MARTIN KIPPENBERGER
SARAH LUCAS
CIPRIAN MURESAN
ISABEL NOLAN
BLAIR THURMAN
JOHN TORREANO
GAVIN TURK