Chris Burden
08 Mar - 04 Apr 2009
CHRIS BURDEN
One Ton One Kilo
March - April 4, 2009
456 North Camden Drive
Beverly Hills, CA 90210
Tel 310.271.9400 Fax 310.271.9420
Tue-Sat 10-5:30
We regret to inform you that the opening reception on Saturday, March 7 must be cancelled.
100 kilos of gold bricks bought by Gagosian Gallery for CHRIS BURDEN: One Ton One Kilo was purchased from Stanford Coins and Bullion, a subsidiary of Stanford Financial Group, which as widely reported in the press, is now in receivership. Unfortunately, the gallery's gold has been frozen while the SEC investigates Stanford.
CHRIS BURDEN: One Ton One Kilo cannot be mounted until the gold bullion is released. Please continue to check our website for a new opening date.
Gagosian Gallery is pleased to announce "One Ton, One Kilo", an exhibition by Chris Burden.
Burden juxtaposes an historical work with a new one in an ongoing exploration of the duality that underlies much of his art. Here duality resides in both the literal and figurative aspects of weights and measures, as well as in the layers of meaning embedded in the known hierarchy of materials.
Following his early controversial performance work, throughout the late seventies and eighties Burden's interests shifted to broader themes relating to science, ecology, technology, and politics. He produced objects and installations that evoked the rationalism of scientific and technological discourse while undermining their claims to functionality. Memorable examples include Flying Steamroller (1996), where the massive heft of a steamroller was balanced by cement blocks to defy the forces of gravity; and Fist of Light (1992-93), his "visual metaphor for nuclear fission," hermetically sealed inside its own room-sized structure.
Chris Burden was born in Boston, MA in 1946. He received his BFA from Pomona College at Claremont, CA and then went onto receive an MFA from the University of California, Irvine. Burden's solo shows include the South London Gallery (2006), the Baltic Center for Contemporary Art, Gateshead (2002), Museum Moderner Kunst Stiftung Ludwig, Vienna (2002), Orange Country Museum of Art, Newport Beach (2000), the Tate Gallery, London (1999), MAK-Austrian Museum of Applied Arts (1996), and the Lannan Foundation, Los Angeles (1992). In 2008, Burden presented both a permanent installation outside the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, entitled Urban Light and comprised of 202 antique streetlights, to inaugurate the new Broad Contemporary Art Museum, as well as a sixty-five foot skyscraper made entirely of Erector set parts, entitled What My Dad Gave Me, that was exhibited by the Public Art Fund at Rockefeller Center in New York. Burden lives and works in Topanga, CA.
For more information, please contact Michelle Pobar at 310.271.9400 or mpobar@gagosian.com. MoreUpdated May 3rd 2007 8:35PM
One Ton One Kilo
March - April 4, 2009
456 North Camden Drive
Beverly Hills, CA 90210
Tel 310.271.9400 Fax 310.271.9420
Tue-Sat 10-5:30
We regret to inform you that the opening reception on Saturday, March 7 must be cancelled.
100 kilos of gold bricks bought by Gagosian Gallery for CHRIS BURDEN: One Ton One Kilo was purchased from Stanford Coins and Bullion, a subsidiary of Stanford Financial Group, which as widely reported in the press, is now in receivership. Unfortunately, the gallery's gold has been frozen while the SEC investigates Stanford.
CHRIS BURDEN: One Ton One Kilo cannot be mounted until the gold bullion is released. Please continue to check our website for a new opening date.
Gagosian Gallery is pleased to announce "One Ton, One Kilo", an exhibition by Chris Burden.
Burden juxtaposes an historical work with a new one in an ongoing exploration of the duality that underlies much of his art. Here duality resides in both the literal and figurative aspects of weights and measures, as well as in the layers of meaning embedded in the known hierarchy of materials.
Following his early controversial performance work, throughout the late seventies and eighties Burden's interests shifted to broader themes relating to science, ecology, technology, and politics. He produced objects and installations that evoked the rationalism of scientific and technological discourse while undermining their claims to functionality. Memorable examples include Flying Steamroller (1996), where the massive heft of a steamroller was balanced by cement blocks to defy the forces of gravity; and Fist of Light (1992-93), his "visual metaphor for nuclear fission," hermetically sealed inside its own room-sized structure.
Chris Burden was born in Boston, MA in 1946. He received his BFA from Pomona College at Claremont, CA and then went onto receive an MFA from the University of California, Irvine. Burden's solo shows include the South London Gallery (2006), the Baltic Center for Contemporary Art, Gateshead (2002), Museum Moderner Kunst Stiftung Ludwig, Vienna (2002), Orange Country Museum of Art, Newport Beach (2000), the Tate Gallery, London (1999), MAK-Austrian Museum of Applied Arts (1996), and the Lannan Foundation, Los Angeles (1992). In 2008, Burden presented both a permanent installation outside the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, entitled Urban Light and comprised of 202 antique streetlights, to inaugurate the new Broad Contemporary Art Museum, as well as a sixty-five foot skyscraper made entirely of Erector set parts, entitled What My Dad Gave Me, that was exhibited by the Public Art Fund at Rockefeller Center in New York. Burden lives and works in Topanga, CA.
For more information, please contact Michelle Pobar at 310.271.9400 or mpobar@gagosian.com. MoreUpdated May 3rd 2007 8:35PM