LONDON.- Gagosian is presenting Live in Your Head: Richard Artschwagers Cabinet of Curiosities, an exhibition spanning the five decades of Artschwagers career, and his first in London since 2003.
Live in Your Head was conceived specifically in response to the Davies Street gallery space, with its wide plate glass window giving on to a busy Mayfair thoroughfare. The installation will be visible from the street, its components arranged like objects in a Joseph Cornell box. It also recalls a sixteenth-century Wunderkammer, or cabinet of curiositya collection of specimens, relics, and other marvels that was displayed as a microcosm of its owners knowledge and experience. Artschwager studied science and mathematics at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York before and after serving as an intelligence officer in the Second World War. In making art, he revealed an empirical fascination with artifacts both extraordinary and banal, deriving surreal results from everyday sources, whether through shifts in scale or transpositions of forms from one material to another.
The exhibition is named for a sculpture titled Live in Your Head (2002) that is itself a reference to Harald Szeemanns paradigmatic 1969 group exhibition of the same title, in which Artschwager participated. Live in Your Head: When Attitudes Become Form upended fixed ideas about the art of the timenamely, the relationship between artist, viewer, space, and curator. Artschwagers work engages and activates the environment it inhabits, often guiding viewers attention to the discreet or overlooked. His signature blpsvisual ciphers that are introduced into locations both indoor and outdoor at wildly varying scalesanimate spaces that are habitually forgotten or unused, such as corners and crannies, or even the upper reaches of a Manhattan smokestack. Bristle Corner (1995) functions in a similar way to the blps, in three dimensions, its appearance shifting according to ones viewpoint. In Walker (1964), Artschwager redacted the familiar stabilizing aid into a geometric sculpture totally detached from function. In Klock (1989), a small timepiece is set into a wooden body with winglike protrusionsa playful embodiment of the idiom time flieswhile the sculptures Exclamation Point (Yellow) (2001) and Pregunta II (1983) render punctuationthe idea of a grammatical figure designed to literally interrupt space and timeas primary form and content.
Associated with many genres but cleaving to none, Artschwagers art has been variously described as Pop, due to its derivation from utilitarian objects and its incorporation of commercial and industrial materials; Minimal, owing to its geometric forms and solid presence; and Conceptual, because of its cerebral detachment. Focusing on the structures of perception, and conflating the visual world of images (painting) with the tactile world of objects (sculpture), his inspirations and points of departure range from counterintelligence to cabinetry.
A retrospective of Artschwagers work curated by Germano Celant opened at Museo di arte moderna e contemporanea di Trento e Rovereto, Italy, in October 2019, and will travel to the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao, Spain, in February 2020.