Pirelli HangarBicocca opens a major exhibition of works by Bruce Nauman

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Pirelli HangarBicocca opens a major exhibition of works by Bruce Nauman
Bruce Nauman, Black Marble Under Yellow Light, 1981/1988 “la Caixa“ Foundation Contemporary Art Collection, Barcelona © 2022 Bruce Nauman / SIAE. Courtesy Sperone Westwater, New York.



MILAN.- Pirelli HangarBicocca will present a major exhibition dedicated to Bruce Nauman, one of the world’s most prominent living artists (from September 15, 2022 to February 26, 2023). Organized by Pirelli HangarBicocca, Milan, in collaboration with Tate Modern, London, and Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam, the exhibition will provide an in-depth overview of Nauman’s spatial research and important experiments with architecture, light, sound, language and video over half a century.

The exhibition "Neons Corridors Rooms" gathers thirty works created since the second half of the 1960s that explore the most innovative dimension in the practice of Bruce Nauman (born Fort Wayne, Indiana, 1941; lives and works in New Mexico), with a focus on his spatial and architectural research. The exhibition draws attention to this specific aspect of the artist’s research that has been overlooked in the past years. In a career spanning over fifty years, Nauman has investigated the human condition and the deeper meaning of art-making, embracing a wide variety of different media—installation, video, sculpture, performance, photography, drawing, and sound—with a radical and pioneering attitude.

In addition to works presented in retrospectives in London (October 2020-February 2021) and Amsterdam (June-October 2021), the exhibition at Pirelli HangarBicocca, curated by Roberta Tenconi and Vicente Todolí with Andrea Lissoni, Nicholas Serota, Leontine Coelewij, Martijn van Nieuwenhuyzen and Katy Wan, also features a new selection of works that includes some of Nauman's most representative installations, from many international public and private collections—including the Artist Rooms National Galleries of Scotland and Tate, Centre Pompidou, Paris, IVAM, Valencia, Hamburger Kunsthalle, Hamburg, Kunstmuseum, Basel, Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía, Madrid, Museum Boijmans van Beuningen, Rotterdam, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum / Panza Collection, New York, Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam, Tate Modern, London, as well as Annibale Berlingieri Collection, Benesse Collection, Okayama, Collection of Jack and Nell Wendler, Courtesy of Wendler Family LLC, Daskalopoulos Collection, Dia Art Foundation, Emanuel Hoffmann Foundation, FER Collection, Froehlich Collection, Herbert Foundation, Ghent, and “la Caixa” Foundation as well as the Bruce Nauman Studio. Covering over 5,000 square meters in the Navate gallery of Pirelli HangarBicocca, and also occupying other spaces, such as the Reading Room and the outdoor area, the exhibition brings together for the first time the various types of corridors and rooms, along with six neon pieces, five video and sound installations, and a selection of tunnels, Nauman’s sculptural models for underground architecture. Spanning nearly four decades of research, the exhibition groups works following recurrent themes, thus highlighting on the one hand the variations and affinities among the different works, and on the other hand the artist's extensive and continuous experimentation.

Realized from the late 1960s, the corridors are structures designed by Bruce Nauman to manipulate, record, and test the viewer’s experience and movements within a space. Their architecture compels visitors to follow a path that is both physical and emotional, leading to a greater awareness of limitations and corporality. The exhibition outlines the early stages and development of this body of work, starting with the very first corridor created by the artist, Performance Corridor (1969). The idea for this work came from a performance recorded in the video Walk with Contrapposto (1968)—also featured in the Milan exhibition—in which Nauman walks back and forth through a narrow passageway with exaggerated hip movements, imitating the contrapposto pose of classical sculptures. The following year, in 1969, for an exhibition at the Whitney Museum in New York, the artist displayed the structure for this video as a walk-in sculpture, encouraging visitors to use it themselves. Until then, Nauman’s videos and performances had focused on his own presence and figure, with Performance Corridor the artist shifted his attention and research to the viewers, and the relationship they establish with the space around them.

"Neons Corridors Rooms" reveals how this practice has become a means for Nauman to experiment with space and the body in increasingly radical ways. The exhibition in fact investigates the different types of corridors that followed over the years, employing various shapes, sizes and modes of fruition. The complexity of these works have grown progressively, to the point of incorporating rooms and inserting sound, light, tactile, plastic or visual elements and devices, which alter the visitor’s perception and create a sense of disorientation. In Green Light Corridor (1970), for example, a green fluorescent light floods the narrow walkable space between the two walls, while in Corridor Installation with Mirror - San Jose Installation (Double Wedge Corridor with Mirror) (1970) Nauman uses a mirror to disorient visitors as they walk through it. Made in Milan in 1971 at the Françoise Lambert Gallery, and reconstructed here for the first time, Funnel Piece (Françoise Lambert Installation) (1971) harnesses natural light as a generative factor in experience. Similarly, electronic and




surveillance tools, such as closed-circuit cameras, are repurposed to explore reactions in people's behavior and movement when they find out that they are being recorded and monitored, as is the case in Going Around the Corner Piece with Live and Taped Monitors (1970).

In his Dream Passage with Four Corridors (1984), the work that opens the exhibition "Neons Corridors Rooms," the artist uses corridors, fluorescent colored lights, and everyday objects such as chairs and tables, to create a dreamlike home environment. With MAPPING THE STUDIO II with color shift, flip, flop, & flip/flop (Fat Chance John Cage) (2001), installed in the Cubo space, the artist focuses on seemingly marginal aspects of the world around us that are usually overlooked. The work comprises seven video projections in which Nauman records the nighttime activity taking place in his studio in New Mexico. As the title itself suggests, the images are chromatically altered or flipped, changing almost imperceptibly, so as to cause a sense of spatial and temporal dislocation in the viewer. In the audio installation Raw Materials (2004), the artist creates what can be described as an actual soundscape. The work, commissioned for Tate Modern's Turbine Hall in 2004, is installed outdoors for the first time, in the outside area of Pirelli HangarBicocca. Twenty-one audio recordings, relating to as many previous works of the artist, are played on a loop, tracing his long career through a succession of cross-references, flashbacks and acoustic alterations.

The audio tracks for Raw Materials reveal another fundamental aspect of Bruce Nauman's practice: the use of language and its many relational possibilities. This theme clearly emerges in the neon pieces, which are among the artist's best known and most celebrated works. Of these, Pirelli HangarBicocca presents a significant selection that shows their evolution. The neon works look into the formal and psychological nature of language, and the transformative potential of the written text. Reflections on art and the role of the artist are central in the very first neons from the late 1960s, such as The True Artist Helps the World by Revealing Mystic Truths (Window or Wall Sign) (1967) and My Name As Though it Were Written on the Surface of the Moon (1968), while puns and increasingly complex investigations into human existence, and the disturbing aspects of childhood, appear in Run from Fear, Fun from Rear (1972), One Hundred Live and Die (1984), or Hanged Man (1985).

Several of the most important international institutions have hosted solo exhibitions and projects by Bruce Nauman, such as M Woods, Beijing (2022); Punta della Dogana-Pinault Collection, Venice (2021-2022); Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam (2021); Tate Modern, London (2020-2021); Museo Picasso Malaga (2019); Schaulager, Basel; MoMA Museum of Modern Art and MoMA PS1, New York (2018-2019); Philadelphia Museum of Art (2016); Fondation Cartier, Paris (2015); Museum of Contemporary Art, San Diego (2008); Berkeley Art Museum, Castello di Rivoli Museo d'Arte Contemporanea, Turin, and Menil Collection (2007-2008); and Tate Modern, London (2004), in addition to the major retrospective organized in 1993-1995 by the Walker Art Center, Minneapolis and Hirshhorn Museum, Washington, D.C. His first retrospective was presented at Los Angeles County Museum of Art and travelled to the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, as well as to other international institutions (1972-1974). Nauman has also participated in many group exhibitions and biennials, including the Venice Biennale (2015, 2013, 2007, 1999, 1987, 1980, and 1978), and documenta, Kassel (1992, 1982, 1977, 1972, and 1968). He has received numerous awards, including the Frederick Kiesler Prize for Architecture and the Arts, Austria (2014); Centennial Medal Laureates, American Academy, Rome (2009); Beaux-Arts Magazine Art Awards: Best International Artist, Paris; Praemium Imperiale Prize for Visual Arts, Japan (2004); Honorary Doctor of Arts, California Institute of the Arts, Valencia (2000); and the Wolf Foundation Prize in Arts (Sculpture), Israel (1993). In 2009 he represented the United States at the 53. Venice Biennale, winning the Golden Lion for Best National Participation, while in 1999 he won the Golden Lion for Lifetime Achievement at the 48. Venice Biennale.

The Terra Foundation for American Art is dedicated to fostering exploration, understanding, and enjoyment of the visual arts of the United States for national and international audiences. Recognizing the importance of experiencing original works of art, the foundation provides opportunities for interaction and study, beginning with the presentation and growth of its own art collection in Chicago. To further cross-cultural dialogue on American art, the foundation supports and collaborates on innovative exhibitions, research, and educational programs. Implicit in such activities is the belief that art has the potential both to distinguish cultures and to unite them.

A monograph presenting the most up to date studies on Bruce Nauman's spatial and architectural research is published in conjunction with the “Neons Corridors Rooms'' exhibition. Providing an in-depth analysis of the conceptual developments, formal variations and relevance of this body of work, the catalogue includes contributions commissioned from: Francesca Esmay, Alfred Fletchtheim Director of Engagement, Conservation and Collection Care at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York, who co-led the museum’s Panza Collection Initiative project; Joan Simon, critic and independent curator, editor of the Bruce Nauman catalogue raisonné (1994); and Gloria Sutton, Associate Professor for Contemporary Art History at Northeastern University Art + Design in Boston. Along with extensive photographic documentation of the works, the volume also includes a text by exhibition curators Roberta Tenconi and Vicente Todolí on the specificity of the exhibition project, as well as detailed entries on the works on display and their installation history, complemented by a wide selection of images and archival documents, written by curators, scholars and researchers from international institutions, including: Lucia Aspesi, Vincent Baby, Ben Borthwick, Matilde Guidelli-Guidi, Mariagiulia Leuzzi, Ted Mann, Teodora di Robilant, Francesco Stocchi, Taylor Walsh and Katy Wan.










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