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Sunday, November 23, 2025 |
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| Landmark exhibition is largest museum presentation of Robert Therrien's monumental work to date |
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Robert Therrien, No title (folding table and chairs, dark brown), 2007. Painted steel and aluminum, fabric, and plastic. Courtesy of Glenstone Museum. Photo by Joshua White/JWPictures.com.
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LOS ANGELES, CA.- This fall, The Broad presents Robert Therrien: This is a Story, the largest museum exhibition of the late artists widely-adored work to date, on view November 22, 2025 to April 5, 2026. Therriens meditations on scale and material are a deeply influential and well-known approach within the field of contemporary sculpture, significant to The Broads own identity as a museum, and long admired by visitors of all ages. The installation showcase Therriens personal vocabulary of images and symbolsfrom enormous tables, chairs, and dishes, to intimate drawings of snowmen, birds, and chapelsas they become a language of continuous creation and transformation for the artist over time. Featuring more than 120 works spanning five decades, the exhibition offers unprecedented access to the artists exploration of scale, memory, and perception, just miles from the downtown Los Angeles home and studio space he operated out of for close to thirty years beginning in 1990. Many of the works on view, including those created just before Therriens untimely death in 2019, have never been featured in museum exhibitions and will offer new avenues of understanding his practice.
Robert Therrien has longstanding ties to The Broad and was one of the very first L.A.-based artists to enter the Broad collection decades ago, in its first, formative years. His massive sculpture Under the Table has captivated visitors to our museums galleries since the day The Broad opened in 2015, as a surreally enlarged wooden table offering layers of the artists intellectual and art historical inquiry within an aura of domestic familiarity, said Joanne Heyler, Founding Director and President of The Broad. She added, For our visitors who know and love Under the Table, this ambitious show will reveal a deeper and wide-lens look into the completely unique world Therrien createda Los- Angeles-based body of work that reshaped contemporary sculpture.
Therrien (19472019) was born in Chicago and relocated to Los Angeles in the 1970s to complete an MFA at the University of Southern California. Despite the prominence of conceptual and minimalist practices at the time, he developed his own adjacent artistic vernacular that saw the infinite potential of ordinary objects across basic forms and their three-dimensional counterparts, varying in size, color, and detail. A single Therrien gesture can expand, contract, change materially, or seamlessly transform into other images entirely. A chapel will become an oil can; the oil can will become a pitcher; the pitcher, a cone, then morphing into a witch hat. At the heart of Therriens practice is a sense of artistic animation, by turns fun, playful, and serious.
Los Angeles has been and remains a historically important place to make sculpture and Robert Therrien is vital to that story said Ed Schad, Curator and Publications Manager at The Broad. From his handmade and intimate responses to Minimalism in the 1970s, to his early involvement in what would become a golden age of L.A. fabrication, Therrien made important contributions to many of sculptures central conversations for over forty years. However, the most important thing to know about Therrien is that he can evoke a sense of wonder. What starts in Therriens personal and closely guarded memories and passions, becomes a mysterious place in which a viewer can think about and dwell in ones own.
Visitors will be able to walk under and around large tables and chairs, approach enormous hanging beards, and navigate around large, stacked dishes designed to appear to be in motion and alter ones sense of balance. In addition, a special collaboration with the artists estate will expose visitors to partial reconstructions of Therriens studio environment, including his project tables, drawings, and tools, to full-sized rooms full of surprises and encounters that are a hallmark of the artists practice.
Therriens living and working space in Downtown L.A. remains pivotal to his understanding of space and size.
In addition to being the largest solo museum presentation of his work to date, Robert Therrien: This is a Story places his legacy within the broader arc of contemporary sculpture in Los Angeles and beyond. An exhibition catalog published by DelMonico Books will develop these connections further, edited by curator Ed Schad and featuring texts by Kathryn Scanlon, Richard Armstrong, and Darby English, as well as reflections from Vija Celmins, Vicky Arnold, Jacob Samuel, Christina Forrer and more.
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