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Photo: Courtesy of the Whitney Museum of American Art

I.jpg propose that Lawrence Weiner’s retrospective entitled ‘AS FAR AS THE EYE CAN SEE’, currently at the Whitney Museum and traveling to MOCA Los Angeles, will undoubtedly mean different things to different people. Co-curated by Donna De Salvo and Ann Goldstein, it has been applauded for being overdue, which it is, and cautioned for its over-crowding on one floor of the Whitney, which it is. That being said, the show feels unexpectedly heroic in these giddy, bloated times. Who knew?

Weiner is a materialist, who pushes around displays of language as a preface to (maybe) pushing around the materials themselves. He is not a Fluxus-mystic, visual poet, or idea artist. The appearance of his art – words, color, and some symbols, is comprehensible and carries an immediate recognition factor. Acceptance of his practice (and Weiner was the first artist I ever was aware of who referred to himself as a ‘practitioner’ in an interview with Willoughby Sharp, Avalanche, Spring ’72) remains controversial to those audience members who require the comforting presence of the physical, or handmade art object . And those are many.

Born in 1942 and on the road until the early 60’s, Weiner, a public school educated New Yorker, appeared less interested in Pop Art, and more in the party-crashing systemic reasoning that led out of Frank Stella’s ‘black’ paintings. I suspect that Weiner, whose first documented work was of a planned explosion (1960), had a penchant for ‘removing’ (Stella’s canvases notched corners and absent centers) than for ‘adding’ (beatnik/pop assemblage). Increasingly dubious with filling in shapes on canvas, the artist formed a militant indifference to the presentation of his art. In a group of paintings from 1965, shown at the Whitney for the first time together (at least for me), Weiner shifted responsibility for the paintings scale, shape, and color to whoever commissioned/purchased a work. The pieces themselves are not startling and look of their time, like ‘do-it-yourself’ versions of Robert Mangold’s later paintings. By 1968, Weiner dispenses altogether with the making of things, intersecting with Andy Warhol’s own ambivalence, feigned or otherwise, in his decision-making process. Weiner appreciated Warhol; both artists were socially ubiquitous and both cast attractive members of their milieu in their films.

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From the press release

Opening: 11 January, 2008Exhibition duration: 11 January – 15 February, 2008
During the exhibition “Nord Nord West” c/o – Atle Gerhardsen will be presenting work by Vibeke Tandberg, Annika Ström, Vanessa Baird and Amy Adler.

The photo series “Faces” (1998) dates back to the time Vibeke Tandberg spent in Berlin. In this work she adopts the appearance of friends and acquaintances, not only mimicking their characteristic facial expressions, but also imitating their posture and gestures. By digitally reworking photographs, the artist is able to interweave the typical traits of the chosen person with an image of herself, thereby questioning the paradigm of well-defined bodies, stable personality patterns and fixed parts to play.

Vanessa Baird mainly works with techniques such as watercolour, pastel and drawing. In four watercolours (2007) the artist herself plays the main part in oppressive and haunting domestic scenes, in which dangers lurk around every corner. These scenes tap into a wealth of stories from antiquity, folklore tradition and fairy tales, as the everyday horror seeping into a familiar home setting.

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Annika Ström, 2005

Annika Ström’s video “5 seconds” (2007) shows a textual work (acrylic on paper). “This work was made with passion” reads the text that is only presented for a 5-second time span, positioned between papers and water bottles strewn on the floor. And then the video ends. With a certain sense of humour, Annika Ström reflects on the understanding of painting, which is still part and parcel of the ongoing discussion of this medium.

Amy Adler is primarily known for the photographs of her own drawings. In recent years, however, she has abandoned this processual working method and now only shows the original drawings. “Director I” and “Director III” (2006) are pastel drawings on canvas and the technique used endows them with a transparent and filigree texture. The series “Director” depicts a movie director with her camera during a film shoot. By making use of the camera, human perception can be filtered and steered in a certain direction, providing a selection of certain moments and settings, which are then finally selected and arranged in a film. In the end, this final product is able to present a specific message.The title of the exhibition also refers to a film title. Now it is used to juxtapose the different artistic positions. Concept by Maike Fries.

For further information or visuals please contact c/o – Atle Gerhardsen: Tel.: +49-30-69 51 83 41,Fax: +49-30-69 51 83 42, E-mail: office@atlegerhardsen.com or visit our website at http://www.atlegerhardsen.com.

Annika Ström
Texts by Annika Ström
Published May 2005

Annika Ström
Call for a demonstration
Published March 2007

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From the Press release (please check soon for the forthcoming article on the exhibition byTim Maul)

L.jpgawrence Weiner: AS FAR AS THE EYE CAN SEE is a comprehensive examination of Weiner’s remarkable and cohesive oeuvre, assembling key selections and bodies of work from throughout his nearly fifty-year career. The exhibition represents the full range of Weiner’s art, from the early Propeller and Removal paintings of the 1960s, to the artist’s renowned “specific and general” works—works using language that have characterized his art since 1968. Also included are works on paper, films, videos, books, posters, multiples, and audio works. In conjunction with the exhibition, a series of Weiner’s films will be screened at New York’s Anthology Film Archives. As co-curator Donna De Salvo remarks, “By jettisoning the most fundamental notions about the art object and its dissemination, Lawrence Weiner arrived at a form that has made it possible for him to insinuate his art into the world—the arena he sees for his work. His works exist on the façades of buildings, as song lyrics, as tattoos on bodies, and of course on the walls of galleries. A compilation of these efforts reads more as atlas than exhibition catalogue.”

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