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Exhibition of films, drawings, sculpture, and prints by William Kentridge opens at Marian Goodman

2013-09-18 08:59:42artdaily.org

NEW YORK, NY.- Marian Goodman Gallery announces Second-hand Reading, an exhibition of films, drawings, sculpture, and prints by William Kentridge which opened to the public on Tuesday, September 17th and runs through October 26th.

The exhibition evolves out of works and projects begun in 2012: the Six Drawing Lessons, delivered as part of The Norton Lectures series at Harvard University in 2012 in which a consideration about work in the studio and the studio as a place of making meaning developed; and the recent 5-channel video and sound installation with breathing machine, The Refusal of Time.

Four different bodies of work overlap and intersect: ink drawings on book pages, flip-book films and their drawings, kinetic sculptures, and linocuts. Concerns and directions in this body of work include, as Kentridge says, “taking sense and deconstructing it, taking nonsense and seeing if sense can be constructed from it …. This leads to the question of mistranslation, and the pressure that imperfect understanding gives to the act of imagination. Hence the fragments of brush marks on pages turning into trees, and the objects of the Rebus having alternative readings - seen this way, the bird becomes its own cage; the tree contains the man carrying the wooden load; the sphere, cone and cube of Cezanne contain multitudes.”

A series of large drawings of trees in Indian ink on found encyclopedia pages, torn up and reassembled, analyzes the form of different trees indigenous to southern Africa. Drawn across multiple pages from books, each drawing is put together as a puzzle – the single pages first painted, then the whole pieced together.

Three new ‘flip book’ films and framed blocks of drawings on found pages from which the films were made over the past year are being shown. Constructed from hundreds of new drawings, the films include self-portrait sequences of the artist, texts, geometric blocks of color, and calligraphic renderings. They include: In the North Gallery viewing room, NO IT IS, a triptych of flip-book films shown on three flat screens comprised of Workshop Receipts, The Anatomy of Melancholy, and Practical Enquiries (2012). In the South Gallery, Second-hand Reading (2013), with music by Neo Muyanga, is being projected. Sonnets (2012), a flip-book film edited to the rhythm and sound of Shakespeare's Sonnet No. 18, is being shown on a flat screen. Created from panels of color painted onto book pages, the hues correspond to an exploration of colours for a future production of Alban Berg’s Lulu.

Rebus, 2013 is a new series of bronze sculptures and is being presented in two sets. Referring in title to the allusional device using pictures to represent words or parts of words, each individual bronze object forms two distinct images when turned to a certain angle. Each piece is being shown in the exhibition with its two views. When paired in correspondence, for example, a final image – a nude – is created from two original forms – a stamp and a telephone.

Kinetic sculptures with music and sound have their origin in both The Refusal of Time, shown at Documenta (13), and the performative piece Refuse the Hour, and are constructed from found objects such as bicycle wheels, sewing machines, bellows, megaphones, tripods and drums. They include Small Bellows, Wooden Kinetic Megaphone, Flag Kinetic Sculpture, Drum Machine, Steel Rotating Megaphone. A Singer sewing machine and a chorus of Singer sewing machines, perform music composed by Neo Muyanga, as does a rack of drums, with software design and circuitry for both done by Janus Fouché.

Rubrics, Colour Charts, and Universal Archive are new series of prints. Rubrics is a series of 14 red silkscreened texts which punctuate the space with phrases related to the series of Six Drawings Lessons, the Norton lectures presented at Harvard University last spring. Both the extensive linocut series titled Universal Archive, and the two Colour Chart prints were first made as ink drawings on paper, then transferred to lino and cut.

Kentridge writes, “Between these various bodies of work exist formal mistranslations: brush marks of ink drawings turn into linocuts; the two dimensional ink drawings turn into bronze sculptures. Some points of intersection: ink drawings to linocuts to bronzes; ink drawings to trees, with the brushes producing multiple marks for the leaves of trees. The requisitioning of old forms for new uses: encyclopedias are supports for drawings, sewing machines and a bicycle become sculpture. Words as provocations towards meaning rather than clear syllogisms: the phrases in the drawings push us to make some sense; the Rebus sculptures as hieroglyphs, placed in a line like a line of letters or words or syllables which can be rearranged to make new sentences. ”

William Kentridge’s first large-scale solo exhibition in South America, titled Fortuna, has been travelling since October 2012, and will be next seen at the Pinacoteca Do Estado De São Paulo, São Paulo, opening on the 31st August 2013 where it will be on view through 17 November 2013. Originating at the Instituto Moreira Salles (IMS) in Rio, it was most recently shown at Fundação Iberê Camargo (FIC), Porto Alegre through this past June.

In Praise of Shadows: William Kentridge in the Collection, opened at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York on the 26th August 2013 and runs through 2 February 2014. This September William will direct Shostakovich’s opera The Nose at The New York Metropolitan Opera, where it returns after its inaugural run in 2010. The opera, based on Gogol’s comic story of a bureaucrat’s satirical misadventures in search of his missing nose, is a co-production of The Metropolitan Opera, the Festival d’Aix en Provence, and the Opéra National de Lyon. Directed by Kentridge, it will be conducted by Valery Gergiev. Performances will run from late September through late October 2013.

Recent projects from this past year include the distinguished Charles Eliot Norton lectures at Harvard University which William Kentridge was invited to deliver in the Spring of 2012, and for which he was in residence at Harvard that year. A forthcoming publication of the Six Drawing Lessons will be published by Harvard University Press in 2014. In the Summer of 2012, The Refusal of Time, a 5-channel video installation with complex soundscape by Philip Miller and a breathing machine, was first presented at Documenta (13) in Kassel, Germany. That Fall Kentridge’s eight-channel video installation I am not me, the horse is not mine, referencing Russian modernism, was showcased in the UK in the Tanks at Tate Modern. In October 2012, the survey exhibition William Kentridge: Fortuna opened in Rio de Janeiro, and one month later, in November The Refusal of Time was seen at MAXXI in Rome. A related theatre piece Refuse the Hour was performed in both Rome and Athens, and this Summer was performed in Paris and Vienna.

Recent publications include: NO, IT IS, the original flip book, an impetus for the creation of the new flip-book films, published by Fourthwall Books, Johannesburg. The Refusal of Time, a documentation of the creative process for the work of the same title, shown at Documenta (13), 2012, is published by Xavier Barral, Paris. William Kentridge: Fortuna, edited by Lilian Tone, is the catalogue accompanying the exhibition Fortuna, which opened in Rio de Janeiro in 2012 and is currently on tour in Brazil through 2013. De Como Nao Fui Ministro do Estado, a flipbook made for the same exhibition in Brazil is drawn on the pages of Machado de Assis’ novel Memorias Postumas de Bras Cubas, first published in 1881. A Universal Archive: William Kentridge as Printmaker, is a catalogue accompanying a touring exhibition of prints in the UK, published by Hayward Publishing, London. That Which is Not Drawn, a book of conversations between William Kentridge and Rosalind Morris, is published by Seagull Books, Calcutta, India.

(责任编辑:刘路涛)

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