ZURICH.- Galerie Gmurzynska is presenting Judd / Malevich, an extensive exhibition of two 20th Century masters Donald Judd and Kazimir Malevich inaugurating a new additional space at Talstrasse 37 in Zurich, on view 10 June 15 September, 2017.
In reference to the dual exhibition titled The Moscow Installation, originally realised with Donald Judd at Galerie Gmurzynska in 1994 and featuring the works of Judd and Malevich, the exhibition pays homage to the artistic and intellectual connections of the two artists. The exhibition is curated by Flavin Judd, Curator & CoPresident of Judd Foundation and the son of Donald Judd.
I would love it but what would Malevich say? These were the words of Donald Judd in 1992 when asked by Galerie Gmurzynska if he would want to show his works sideby-side with works of Kazimir Malevich.
Changing the course of art and its intellectual and practical underpinnings up until today, these two artists conceived an entire world of creation a Gesamtkunstwerk ranging from painting to academic writing, to architecture, porcelain and furniture design, among various other fields.
Flavin Judd notes in his essay Black featured in the Judd / Malevich catalogue, The superficial similarities in the squares of Judd and Malevich are distanced when one understands the reasons behind them. For Malevich the abstraction of art, the forgetting of the figure was a way to move towards a future of mankind. For Malevich the abstraction of form and color was towards the biggest thing imaginable: a paradise of the infinite, power, and spirit.
For Judds art it is the reverse. There is no spirit, there is no infinite, there is just what is there, an empirical radicalness of art that wants to go back to basics, to stones on a beach, not infinite, just existing as it is. In this exhibition, Malevichs grand designs and verbose metaphysics are met by Judds specific locations and a knock on a table. For Judd there is no possibility of a society beyond a small family; there is no future that is not just a repetition of the power structure of the past; there are things and there are people, the two are not the same and the individuals have to project their own space.
This publication features essays by Kazimir Malevich, Donald Judd, Flavin Judd, and Dr. Evgenia Petrova, the Deputy Director of the State Russian Museum St. Petersburg, as well as unpublished documentary images and all exhibited works.
The exhibition features two major oil on canvas works by Kazimir Malevich from 1915 and 1917 as well as over 20 important drawings from different periods of the artists oeuvre. The exhibition features an installation of eight works by Donald Judd in plywood and aluminum from the 1980s and 1990s as well as seven newly fabricated, and previously unrealized, examples of his furniture.