LONDON.- A solo presentation of the work of German-born American artist Eva Hesse (1936 1970), a major figure in post-war art. The exhibition is the result of new research by renowned Hesse scholar Professor Briony Fer and is curated by Fer and Barry Rosen, Director of The Estate of Eva Hesse.
Throughout her career, Eva Hesse produced a large number of small, experimental works alongside her large-scale sculpture. These objects, so-called test pieces, were made in a wide range of materials, including latex, wire-mesh, sculp-metal, wax and cheesecloth. Left in her studio at the time of her death, sold or given to friends during her lifetime, these objects evade easy definition, seen variously as experiments, little pieces, moulds, tests or finished pieces.
In her recent research on Hesses work, Briony Fer collectively renamed these objects as studioworks, proposing that their precarious nature places them at the heart of Hesses work and questions traditional notions of what sculpture is.
This exhibition brings together around fifty works drawn from major public and private collections around the world, showing works which are extremely fragile and rarely travel. The exhibition and the accompanying major publication offer a timely new interpretation of Hesses historical position, as well as highlighting her relevance for contemporary art now.
The joy and freedom of Hesses art is staggering. Any young artist could get an education just by coming to this show a few times Jonathan Jones, The Guardian.
Eva Hesse: Studiowork is organized by The Fruitmarket Gallery, Edinburgh in collaboration with
Camden Arts Centre, London; Fundacio Antoni Tapies, Barcelona; Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto and Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive.