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FAD Magazine covers contemporary art – News, Exhibitions and Interviews reported on from London

Isa Genzken at Hauser & Wirth Savile Row Art Opening TONIGHT : Wednesday 14th November 2012


Isa Genzken Hallelujah (New Museum) 2012 Wooden crates, acrylic on canvas, plastic, glass, dried branches, artificial flowers, casters 356 x 120 x 120 cm / 140 1/8 x 47 1/4 x 47 1/4 in
© Isa Genzken Courtesy the artist and Hauser & Wirth Photo: Stefan Altenburger Photography Zürich


Isa Genzken Untitled (detail) 2012 7 parts: Nefertiti plaster busts with glasses on wooden base, wooden plinths, belt, colour photographs in aluminium frames Each part 184 x 50.5 x 40 cm / 72 1/2 x 19 7/8 x 15 3/4 in Total dimensions variable © Isa Genzken Courtesy the artist, Hauser & Wirth and Galerie Buchholz, Cologne


Untitled (detail), 2012 MDF, plastic, glass, mirror foil, perspex, glass and plastic figures, mask, tape, artificial hair, casters 237 x 95 x 113 cm / 93 1/4 x 37 3/8 x 44 1/2 in Stefan Altenburger Photography Zürich

15th November 2012 – 12th January 2013

‘I have always said that with any sculpture you have to be able to say, although this is not a ready-made, it could be one. That’s what a sculpture has to look like. It must have a certain relation to reality’
– Isa Genzken in conversation with Wolfgang Tillmans

Inspired by the stark severity of modernist architecture and the chaotic energy of the city, just as much as by art history, the aesthetics of the great American artists of the Sixties and pop culture, Isa Genzken’s work is continuously looking around itself, translating into three-dimensional form the way that art, architecture, design and media affects the experience of urban life. From 15 November, Genzken will present an exhibition of new and recent works at Hauser & Wirth’s Savile Row gallery. Genzken’s totemic columns, pedestal works and collages combine disparate aspects from her many sources in seemingly nonsensical, yet harmonious sculptural compilations.

The bust of Nefertiti, an ancient icon of feminine beauty, is one of the most well-known and historically significant sculptures. In Genzken’s new series of sculptures, she appropriates plaster reproductions of this bust, which the artist first saw at the Egyptian Museum in Berlin, gives them sunglasses and places them upon tall, white pedestals. She pairs Nefertiti with a reproduction of the Renaissance icon of feminine beauty, the Mona Lisa, whose famous portrait leans against the foot of each pedestal. Genzken then overlays her own self-portrait on to the reproduction of Mona Lisa, playfully inserting herself and her own practice into this multimedia exploration of the lineage of feminine beauty and the place of women in art history.

Genzken’s sculptures are precariously stacked assemblages of potted plants, designer furniture, empty shipping crates and photographs, among other things, arranged with the traditions of modernist sculpture in mind – traditions which are then manipulated by the artist. With this cacophonous array of objects, Genzken undermines the classical notions of sculpture and, in the North Gallery of Savile Row, re-creates the architectural dimensions of the artist’s beloved skyscrapers and the riotous colours of the city streets. Devoid of the weightiness and overpowering scale seen in the sculptures of her Minimalist predecessors, these works abandon notions of order and power, allowing the viewer to relate to the works’ inherently human qualities of fragility and vulnerability.

Both sculpture and photography combine and overlap in Genzken’s collages, whose dense surfaces are formed from the materials of the artist’s world: magazines, flyers, snapshots of friends, self-portraits and reproduced artworks. Genzken makes use of all surfaces of the gallery, including an on-going series of collages that span the floor of the space, like a pavement down a busy city street.

Hauser & Wirth 23 Savile Row London W1S 2ET www.hauserwirth.com/

hauserwirth.com/isa-genzken/biography/

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