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Wednesday, February 11, 2026 |
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| Gagosian stages realism and reflection in Mirrored Fiction, led by Duane Hanson |
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Duane Hanson, Old Lady in Folding Chair, 1976. Oil on polyester resin and fiberglass with mixed media, 48 × 47 × 36 inches (121.9 × 119.4 × 91.4 cm) © 2026 Estate of Duane Hanson/Artists Rights Society (ARS), NY. Photo: Rob McKeever. Courtesy Gagosian.
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ROME.- Gagosian announces Mirrored Fiction, an exhibition of sculptures by Duane Hanson, presented in dialogue with work in a variety of mediums by other artists including Felix Gonzalez-Torres, Andreas Gursky, Jeff Koons, Adam McEwen, and Bruce Nauman.
Mirrored Fiction invites a dialogue around realism and its contemporary afterliveshow the real is staged, witnessed, consumed, and distributed across bodies, images, and social spaces. While each artist approaches this subject from a distinct position, all of them are invested in the forms, representations, and materials of the everyday.
The exhibition is anchored by Duane Hansons hyperrealistic painted bronze sculptures of ordinary Americans. First produced in the context of a renewed interest in figuration sparked by the emergence of Pop art, these monuments to the prosaic test the boundary between reality and representation. Long associated with questions of social visibility, labor, and embodiment, Hansons sculptures act as both subjects of and witnesses to the viewers experience. Sometimes unflattering but still affectionate in their observational directness, they are familiar but poignant, often also resonating with sociopolitical themes.
In Hansons Window Washer (1984), a young man clad in grimy shorts, sneakers, and an unbuttoned short-sleeved shirt brandishes a squeegee, a plastic bucket at his feet. The work is part of an installation at the center of the gallerys ovoid main space, with Gurskys Politik II (Politics II) (2020) hanging on the wall behind it. In the photographers panoramic shot, a group of thirteen German politicians, including Angela Merkel, is arranged like the figures in da Vincis Last Supper (c. 149598). Within the depicted scene, a view of Ed Ruschas painting Five Past Eleven (1989), which juxtaposes a partial clock face with a bamboo pole, forms a backdrop to the gathering. The unexpected pairing embodies Hansons fascination with social class and Gurskys exploration of the human systems that frame it.
Koonss Donkey, from the Easyfun series (1999), a sheet of mirror polished stainless steel in the silhouetted shape of a cartoon animal head, extends the gallerys visual plane while foregrounding desire, self-recognition, and consumption without reciprocity. Its outwardly lighthearted imagery suggests a childs perspective while its reflective surface hints at a nascent process of self-discovery (and perhaps also, per psychoanalyst Jacques Lacan, self-alienation). The work also responds to an explicitly narcissistic impulsein Rome, it hangs opposite Hansons Bodybuilder (198990), a tanned, yet fatigued, shirtless figure in shorts with a sweaty-looking towel slung over one arm.
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