
This 80′ long sculptural wave will be installed in MASS MoCA’s second floor along with several Kiefer paintings. The exhibition entitled Anselm Kiefer: Sculpture and Paintings opens October 20, but the wave will be moved into the galleries starting Monday, September 17. Check the website or call for details. We promise towering cranes, an enormous platform outside the gallery window next to the upside down trees and generally astonishing feats of engineering as we move this enormous sculpture in. Meanwhile check it out in our Courtyard A outside Cafe Latino.
To learn more about the Kiefer exhibition.
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“Among our most important poets of war, in this surprising body of works Anselm Kiefer presents us with poignant moments of color flowering across the ruined topographies of his vast canvases,” said Joseph Thompson, Director of MASS MoCA. “For reasons I still cannot fully fathom, the
Artforum describes Kiefer’s art as “sensuous and mesmerizing images through which … we gain entry to his arcane mindscape of ancient and recent history, philosophy, botany, Nordic myth, National Socialism, alchemy, and Wagner.” The Independent said in a review of Kiefer’s February 2007 exhibition at
An illustrated catalogue will be published in conjunction with the exhibition by Derneburg Publications in association with MASS MoCA. In the book, art historian
The paintings included in the exhibition are: A.E.I.O.U (Elizabeth von Oesterreich) (1987),
Rosenthal describes Kiefer’s paintings: “A landscape by Kiefer always fills the field of the canvas, with the horizon line and suggestion of sky minimal. Adding to this sense of claustrophobia, Kiefer’s typical large-scale format imparts a sense of portentous enormity to the experience. Before one of these mighty paintings, the viewer might feel his face pushed against the painted field, or else envision flying over it, though at a very low altitude. The depicted breadth even conveys a sense of the curvature of the earth. Dark in tonality and sometimes shown with fires burning, these often blackened places seem to have only recently been abandoned by human inhabitants. The depictions are at night or at dusk, thereby adding a melancholic sense of foreboding that horrific events have only just subsided.”
The paintings will surround Etroits sont les Vaisseaux (Narrow Are the Vessels) (2002), an 82-foot-long work of cast concrete, exposed rebar, and lead, rolling in ribbons through the gallery like waves along the shore. The concrete evokes rubble, the aftermath of war, natural disaster, and structural failure of immense proportions. The title comes from the late French Nobel laureate pseudonymously known as Saint-John Perse who once wrote, “One wave throughout the world, one wave since Troy rolls its haunch towards us.”
Born and raised in southern
Kiefer ranks among the best-known and most successful, but also most controversial, of post World War II German artists. In his entire body of work, Kiefer argues with the past and addresses taboo and controversial issues from recent history. Themes from Nazi rule are often reflected in his work; for instance, the painting Margarethe (1981, oil and straw on canvas) was inspired by Paul Celan’s well-known poem Todesfuge (Death Fugue). His works are often realized in extremely large formats (some of the paintings in the current exhibition span 25 feet in length, by 10 feet high). He often builds his imagery on top of photographs, layering the massive canvases with dirt, lead, straw and other materials that generate a literal “ground” that reads of the earth itself. Within these thick, impastoed surfaces (and often by careful titling,) Kiefer embeds textual or symbolic references to historic figures or places: these become encoded signals through which Kiefer invokes and processes history a practice which has linked with a style called “New Symbolism.”
During the early 1970’s Kiefer studied with conceptual artist Joseph Beuys, whose interest in using an array of cultural myths, metaphors and personal symbolic vocabulary as a means by which to engage and understand history inspired Kiefer. (At MASS MoCA, one of his paintings will be shown in an adjacent gallery which houses Beuys’s masterpiece Lightning with Stag in Its Glare, on long-term loan from the Philadelphia Museum of Art.) Kiefer’s early work did not conform to either the Minimalist or Conceptualist movements that were developing at the time he was a student. Instead he created massive, dark paintings and quasi-figurative works that explored German folklore and were inspired by Caspar David Friedrich, among others. In addition to paintings, Kiefer also produced drawings, watercolors, prints, sculptural books and engravings.
Kiefer describes his own artistic process as stimulated by Beuys’s philosophies: “Painting, for me, is not just about creating an illusion. I don’t paint to present an image of something. I paint only when I have received an apparition, a shock, when I want to ‘transform’ something. Something that possesses me,and from which I have to deliver myself. Something I need to transform, to metabolize, and which gives me a reason to paint.”
All works in the exhibition are on extended loan from the collection of Andy and Christine Hall.
MASS MoCA’s galleries are open from 11 – 5, closed Tuesdays. Admission is $12.50 for adults, $9 for students, $5 for children 6 -16 and free for children 5 and under. Members are admitted free at all times. More information on MASS MoCA and the exhibition is available at www.massmoca.org or by calling 413. 662. 2111.
MASS MoCA, the largest center for contemporary visual and performing arts in the
Posted September 11, 2007 by MASS MoCA
Filed under Exhibitions
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February 22nd, 2008 at 1:31 pm
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