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Tuesday, October 7, 2025 |
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Auckland Art Gallery opens New Zealand's first solo exhibition of Louise Bourgeois |
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Louise Bourgeois, The Couple, 2003, Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki, on loan from a private collection. Photo: Christopher Burke, © The Easton Foundation /Licensed by Copyright Agency, AU.
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AUCKLAND.- Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki is presenting the first solo exhibition in Aotearoa New Zealand of Louise Bourgeois (19112010), one of the most intriguing and influential artists of the last century.
Louise Bourgeois: In Private View brings together a selection of works from an international private collection, exhibited publicly for the first time. The exhibition spans over six decades of Bourgeoiss career, from early paintings made in 1945 to a fabric work from the final year of her life.
Auckland Art Gallery Senior Curator, Global Contemporary Art, Natasha Conland, says, Bourgeois remains a defining figure in late twentieth-century art with the ripples of her influence still being felt today. She is known for her highly personal and idiosyncratic sculptural practice which has lent her a special place in the history of art.
The works in the exhibition are from a private collection lived with over many years, reflecting a deep and personal appreciation of her practice.
Widely celebrated for her psychologically charged and bold sculptural practice, Bourgeois explored themes of memory, family, the body and the subconscious, often drawing from personal experiences. She is best known for her series of large spider sculptures, which have been installed in many major international cities.
Louise Bourgeois: In Private View offers an intimate encounter with Bourgeoiss work, and follows the evolution of her art practice over time. Highlights include paintings and her first series of sculptures, the Personages, from the 1940s and early 50s; Lair sculptures from the early 1960s; and significant later works, such as textile-based sculptures and sculptural enclosures. Spider VI (2002) is a wall-mounted example of her internationally acclaimed series of spider sculptures, which she began in the mid-1990s. Also featured is her extraordinary hanging sculpture, The Couple, and late outdoor piece, Eyes.
A series of curator tours and talks, open lates, as well as family-friendly activities has been programmed with the exhibition. The Gallery Shop has also launched a new range of Bourgeois inspired products which includes socks, brooches, books and more.
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