Hauser & Wirth
Zurich
Limmatstrasse 270
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Two Exhibitions
dal 22/1/2015 al 13/3/2015

Segnalato da

Amelia Redgrift


approfondimenti

Andy Hope
Rita Ackermann



 
calendario eventi  :: 




22/1/2015

Two Exhibitions

Hauser & Wirth, Zurich

For Andy Hope 1930's exhibition 'UNappropriated Activities', the artist will present new series of paintings, works on paper and sculpture. Ackermann presents a new series of works that occupy a space between the figurative and the abstract.


comunicato stampa

Andy Hope 1930
UNappropriated Activities

For Andy Hope 1930’s exhibition at Hauser & Wirth Zürich, ‘UNappropriated Activities’, Hope will present new series of paintings, works on paper and sculpture. ‘UNappropriated Activities’ draws together motifs from cosmic phenomena, self-portraiture, and superhero fiction to explore existentialism and contemporary society. The resulting highly personalised cosmology and invented histories on view in the exhibition are linked to canons such as constructivism, suprematism and the foundation of 20th century abstract art.

The very title of the exhibition, ‘UNappropriated Activities’, starts the game like an unexpected movement from a reflection in a mirror or a pirate’s retort. With the addition of a short syllable, the artistic process of appropriation – now the standard of nearly any artistic act – is itself hijacked… and twisted. Suddenly, the unnameable, the untold, the uncalled is back. The prefix ‘un’ calls to mind a whole series of ‘uncanny’ or ‘unpleasant’ figures. One could blame a virtuoso of linguistics such as Jacques Lacan or the world of horror movies for the incalculable power of this circulating negative. With a conviction equal to or greater than these, however, Andy Hope 1930 uses such words to examine the tangible and oppressive reality of neoliberal working and living conditions. He focuses on the devastating consequences of isolation that social life has attained under the banner of self-optimisation and flexibility, the ‘vertical horizon’ that everyone maintains on his touchscreen as his own domain. And, like the ‘anti-hero’ of the comic ‘The Adventures of Unemployed Man’, who turns the world of good-fighting-against-evil on its feet and brings the desire for grandiose actions back to earth (the lonely reading fan), Andy Hope 1930 projects his inversion – the jobless superhero – onto the no less fantastic stage of high culture, where the belief in the inexhaustible genius of the artist still prevails, while the details of his unbelievable commercial success are sold off as fodder for celebrity magazines. Every period writes this dream with a new name and new works – and new victims: ghosts that no one knows anymore or will admit to have known after they have left the spotlight.

The exhibition ‘UNappropriate Activities’ brings a false vocabulary into the brave new world of success – ‘U for Uncalled’ or ‘U for Untold (three-way conversation)’ (2014) – but does not provide a simple or comforting alternative world. Instead, Andy Hope 1930 represents himself in the role of the ‘unappropriate’ teammate: as a ‘Master of Degree’ (2014) who steadfastly clutches his certificate, or as an attentive advisor in a conversation with his own reflections. On the one hand, he develops a trenchant parody of the figure that he could be; on the other, he has driven his paintings to an unsettling extreme, far from clear figuration or tangible representation, but also outside of any common features of solid painterly quality. A black oval (from the series Infinity Crisis) is reminiscent of the icons of Modernism that Malevich first exhibited precisely 100 years ago, but Andy Hope 1930 mixes trust in the reference to high culture with the feeling of standing on the margins of a cheap horror movie. This ‘nebula’ conjures up the shadow of a face and portrays it at the same time, elliptical like the orbits of the planets, as a passageway into a black hole. The poles of the contradiction are even more extreme in the case of the stars of ‘transcendence’, pictures such as ‘Nullus’ (2014) and ‘Ullus’ (2014), in which defection from simple decoration is reduced to a minimum. Every possible new material is used, from strange sprays to effect paints, or leather instead of canvas. This is the foundation for the signs of cosmic visions, sketches of an infinite world, distant from all earthly problems. Whether in ancient Babylon or recent Hollywood, stars signify a life in the glow of the gods, and this is all the more true the further great success recedes from sight. Thus, Andy Hope 1930’s works could be seen as the unspeakable thoughts of the hero who, with a ‘U’ (for unemployment) on his chest, haunts the story of this exhibition as a subject: as luminous as illusion, as dark and raw as exclusion from society. Today the threat of being laid off is discussed during job interviews and functions as a guarantor of limitless commitment during employment. In art only one thing can guarantee such a ‘contract’: the proviso that the artist doesn’t venture out of his territory. This is why, with ‘UNappropriated Activities’, Andy Hope 1930 creates a landscape of his own art that imperceptibly breaks down its own boundaries in every direction.

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Rita Ackermann
Chalkboard Paintings

Hauser & Wirth Zürich is pleased to announce an exhibition of new chalkboard paintings by Rita Ackermann. This body of work was presented for the first time at Sammlung Friedrichshof, Austria in 2014, and a second series was shown later the same year at Art Unlimited, Art Basel. The works in this exhibition are a step further in Ackermann’s investigation into the deconstruction and disappearance of a pictorial language. Ackermann’s new compositions occupy a space between the figurative and the abstract, where human forms simultaneously disappear and re-emerge in traces of chalk dust.

Process is intrinsic to these paintings. Ackermann primes the canvas with traditional chalkboard paint before drawing out a figurative scene in chalk. The drawings are then partially washed away in vigorous sweeping gestures that oscillate between the visible and invisible, revealing only limited emphasis on method, subject and production. The repetitive steps of layering and erasure cause the chalk lines to dissolve in a cyclical process through which new abstracted images and shapes emerge. These are then further overworked with spray paint, prior to a final fixative seal.

Ackermann’s earliest works, created between 1993 and 1996, such as ‘Get a Job’ (1993) were the point of departure for the body of work in this exhibition. The figures in these early paintings are classically composed in idyllic scenes that convey serenity after a violent act. Here, the figures from Ackermann’s early works are the foundation for the chalkboard drawings on the surface of the paintings. The more these chalk drawings are erased, the more visible they become, resulting in a state of flux.

Rather than abandon figuration for abstraction, Ackermann instead aims for the liminal divide that lies between the two. She presents contrasting pallets and pigments and a constant shifting between systematic and accidental lines; her controlled gestures create a script in reverse.

Image: Andy Hope AS AN AM AND U, 2014, Acrylic on canvas, 100 x 80 x 2.5 cm / 39 3/8 x 31 1/2 x 1 in

Press Contact:
Amelia Redgrift, amelia@hauserwirth.com

Opening: Friday 23 January, 6 – 8 pm

Hauser & Wirth
Limmatstrasse 270
8005 Zurich
Gallery hours:
Monday to Friday, 11 am – 6 pm
Saturday, 11 am – 5 pm

IN ARCHIVIO [37]
Tetsumi Kudo
dal 2/12/2015 al 25/2/2016

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