MoMA Museum of Modern Art

Dorothea Rockburne

Drawing Which Makes Itself

21 Sep 2013 - 02 Feb 2014

Installation view of the exhibition, "Dorothea Rockburne: 'Drawing Which Makes Itself'"
September 21, 2013–February 2, 2014. IN2263.7. Photograph by John Wronn.
“How could drawing be of itself and not about something else?” Having asked this question in 1973, the painter Dorothea Rockburne (American, born Canada 1932) went on to answer it in visually compelling and intellectually provocative ways that tested the bounds of traditional drawing practice. This exhibition examines her groundbreaking project Drawing Which Makes Itself, of 1972–73, while highlighting the ideas that she has pursued throughout her career.

Rockburne has said that paper has “terrific importance” for her: “I came to realize that a piece of paper is a metaphysical object. You write on it, you draw on it, you fold it.” She is interested in paper not just as the ground for a drawing but as an active material, its inherent qualities determining the form of the artwork. This is clear in works like Scalar (1971), with its planes of chipboard and paper stained with crude oil, and in the carbon-paper drawings installed on both the wall and the floor, a series on view here in depth for the first time in forty years.

Rockburne studied with a mathematician, Max Dehn, in the early 1950s, and his teachings on the underlying geometries in nature and art affected her profoundly. Her Golden Section Paintings (first exhibited in 1974 at this museum), as well as several series of works on paper that followed, refer to a mathematical ratio used by artists and architects since antiquity to produce shapes of harmonious proportions. Rockburne’s work of later decades, including recent watercolors on view at the exhibition’s entrance, continues her exploration of these principles in nature, and specifically in the motion of planets.

Organized by Esther Adler, Assistant Curator, with Ingrid Langston, Curatorial Assistant, Department of Drawings and Prints.
 

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