Louise Lawler
After
20 Apr - 14 Jul 2018
LOUISE LAWLER
After
20 April – 14 July 2018
Organised with Olivier Renaud-Clément
Since the early 1970s, Louise Lawler has created works that expose the conditions, procedures, modes of presentation, framing, and circulation of works of art. Lawler’s work directs attention to positions of artistic authority and uncovers the presentation strategies that shape one’s encounter with an artwork. Informed by feminism and institutional critique, Lawler’s works reveal overlooked details that point to specific types of au-thority and institutional power.
Lawler’s early projects appropriated other artists’ works and investigated the boundaries between private and public, particularly her photographs of venerated artworks installed in museums, auction houses, or the homes of private collectors. These works established a set of procedures that she has continued to use throughout her career, including her recent tracings, a series she first developed for her exhibition at the Ludwig Museum, Cologne, in 2013. Traced directly from her photographs, and made in collaboration with the artist and children’s book illustrator Jon Buller, the works are black-and-white line drawings that are convert-ed to a scalable vector graphic and printed on a vinyl that is adhered directly to the wall.
For her exhibition at Campoli Presti, Lawler exhibits a selection of tracings and photographs. Each edition of tracings is available as an adaptable digital file that can be printed into any size. Following the properties of vector graphics, the tracings can only take material form through display, and can be destroyed and remade in a different size, giving the option of multiple different presentations. Lawler exposes her most iconic earlier works to a mode of reproduction exclusively linked to the digital, allowing scalar multiplication. Bringing the structure of the picture into its elemental outlines, these traced and enlarged versions of her work act as a framing device that continues the redefinition of the viewer’s attention through transformative image technologies.
Her presentation also includes works from the distorted for the times series. Using a similar procedure, Lawler’s images go through a process of translation into a different object that includes the original. The artificial photoshop script applied to the images evokes the disconnection between the initial version and the last, resulting in a misleading surface, perhaps comparable to contemporary procedures used by the media to manage and manipulate perception.
Louise Lawler (born 1947, Bronxville, USA) lives and works in New York. Solo exhibitions include MoMA, New York (2017); Museum Ludwig, Cologne (2013); Albertinum, Dresden (2012); Wexner Center for the Arts, Ohio (2006); Dia: Beacon, New York (2005), the Museum für Gegenwartskunst, Basel (2004); the Hirshhorn Muse-um and Sculpture Garden, Washington D.C. (1997); The Photographers’ Gallery, London (1997); Kunstverein München (1995); Centre d’Art Contemporain, Geneva, (1994); Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (1990); and at the MoMA, New York (1987). Major group exhibitions include San Francisco Museum of Art (2018); Walker Art Center, Minneapolis (2016); Hammer Museum, Los Angeles (2014); Palazzo Grassi, Venice (2011); Barbican, London (2008); the Whitney Biennial at the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York (2008, 2000, 1991); the Institute of Contemporary Arts, London (2004); Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago (2002); Kunsthalle Basel (2000); Kunstmuseum Düsseldorf (1997); the Art Institute of Chicago (1990); the New Museum of Contemporary Art, New York (1990, 1986, 1985); and the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles (1989, 1988).
After
20 April – 14 July 2018
Organised with Olivier Renaud-Clément
Since the early 1970s, Louise Lawler has created works that expose the conditions, procedures, modes of presentation, framing, and circulation of works of art. Lawler’s work directs attention to positions of artistic authority and uncovers the presentation strategies that shape one’s encounter with an artwork. Informed by feminism and institutional critique, Lawler’s works reveal overlooked details that point to specific types of au-thority and institutional power.
Lawler’s early projects appropriated other artists’ works and investigated the boundaries between private and public, particularly her photographs of venerated artworks installed in museums, auction houses, or the homes of private collectors. These works established a set of procedures that she has continued to use throughout her career, including her recent tracings, a series she first developed for her exhibition at the Ludwig Museum, Cologne, in 2013. Traced directly from her photographs, and made in collaboration with the artist and children’s book illustrator Jon Buller, the works are black-and-white line drawings that are convert-ed to a scalable vector graphic and printed on a vinyl that is adhered directly to the wall.
For her exhibition at Campoli Presti, Lawler exhibits a selection of tracings and photographs. Each edition of tracings is available as an adaptable digital file that can be printed into any size. Following the properties of vector graphics, the tracings can only take material form through display, and can be destroyed and remade in a different size, giving the option of multiple different presentations. Lawler exposes her most iconic earlier works to a mode of reproduction exclusively linked to the digital, allowing scalar multiplication. Bringing the structure of the picture into its elemental outlines, these traced and enlarged versions of her work act as a framing device that continues the redefinition of the viewer’s attention through transformative image technologies.
Her presentation also includes works from the distorted for the times series. Using a similar procedure, Lawler’s images go through a process of translation into a different object that includes the original. The artificial photoshop script applied to the images evokes the disconnection between the initial version and the last, resulting in a misleading surface, perhaps comparable to contemporary procedures used by the media to manage and manipulate perception.
Louise Lawler (born 1947, Bronxville, USA) lives and works in New York. Solo exhibitions include MoMA, New York (2017); Museum Ludwig, Cologne (2013); Albertinum, Dresden (2012); Wexner Center for the Arts, Ohio (2006); Dia: Beacon, New York (2005), the Museum für Gegenwartskunst, Basel (2004); the Hirshhorn Muse-um and Sculpture Garden, Washington D.C. (1997); The Photographers’ Gallery, London (1997); Kunstverein München (1995); Centre d’Art Contemporain, Geneva, (1994); Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (1990); and at the MoMA, New York (1987). Major group exhibitions include San Francisco Museum of Art (2018); Walker Art Center, Minneapolis (2016); Hammer Museum, Los Angeles (2014); Palazzo Grassi, Venice (2011); Barbican, London (2008); the Whitney Biennial at the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York (2008, 2000, 1991); the Institute of Contemporary Arts, London (2004); Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago (2002); Kunsthalle Basel (2000); Kunstmuseum Düsseldorf (1997); the Art Institute of Chicago (1990); the New Museum of Contemporary Art, New York (1990, 1986, 1985); and the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles (1989, 1988).