SAN FRANCISCO, CA.- The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art opened Wolfgang Tillmans: To look without fear, the most comprehensive exhibition of the artists work to date. Organized by The Museum of Modern Art, New York, the survey includes iconic works by Tillmans in photography, video and multimedia installation, a diverse practice united by the artists profoundly inventive philosophical approach, sensitivity and desire for human connection. To look without fear at SFMOMA marks the artists first solo exhibition in San Francisco.
Wolfgang Tillmans has for decades explored what it means to engage with our contemporary world through photography, said Helen and Charles Schwab Director Christopher Bedford. This exhibition offers visitors a full accounting of Tillmanss boundary-defying artmaking practice, which we anticipate will find relevance in a broad range of audiences. His work challenges the hierarchies that govern where we should look, and reminds us of what we might see if we choose not to look away.
To look without fear offers viewers an in-depth look at the work of Wolfgang Tillmans, charting the development of his practice according to a loose chronology beginning in the 1980s through the present day. Tillmans considers the role of the artist to be, among other things, that of an amplifier. He works across every imaginable genre of photography, continually exploring how to make pictures meaningful. From early experiments with a photocopier to his acclaimed portraits, ecstatic images of nightlife, documents of social movements and his cameraless abstractions, the broad range of the artists subject matter reveals a steadfast commitment to engage unflinchingly with the world.
Tillmans first visited San Francisco in 1995, and has a deep affection for the Bay Area, said Erin OToole, SFMOMA Curator and Head of Photography. SFMOMA is thrilled to be hosting his solo debut here, which is so long overdue.
The exhibition reflects Tillmanss distinct approach to presenting his work. I see my installations as a reflection of the way I see, the way I perceive or want to perceive my environment, Tillmans has said. Theyre also always a world that I want to live in. The artist plays an integral role in designing and installing his exhibitions, which feature photographs both framed and unframed, arranged in constellations that extend from floor to ceiling, magazine pages taped to the wall, photocopies, video projections, and tabletop displays. The artists attention to the physical manifestation of his work extends from a longstanding investigation of the poetic and material possibilities of the photographic medium.
Visitors to the exhibition have the opportunity to experience Tillmanss rarely seen work Book for Architects (2014), a two-channel video installation made from a compilation of 450 images from 37 countries taken by the artist over the course of a decade. On two screens presented at an angle reminiscent of an open book, the work collects Tillmanss observations of architecture and its relationship to everyday life.
Also presented in this exhibition is the installation Truth Study Center, an ongoing project which was first presented by Tillmans in 2005, and brings together his own photographs, clippings, ephemera, and printouts of newspaper and magazine articles arranged on tabletops. In this body of work, Tillmans continually interrogates notions of absolutism while also acknowledging the universal human desire to search for truth. Half of the tables presented in To look without fear contain material from 200507, while the other half has been composed using recent material.