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Thomas Erben Gallery 516 West 20th Street, NY 10011-2820 New York
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U.S.A.
Tel.++1 (212) 6458701
Fax++1 (212) 6459630
Contact: Thomas Erben / Louky Keijsers
E-mail: info@thomaserben.com
web www.thomaserben.com
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Thomas Erben Gallery |
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Adrian Piper Early drawings and other works
Thomas Erben is very pleased to present Adrian Piper’s third exhibition at the gallery, which will run concurrently with a retrospective of the artist’s work at the New Museum of Contemporary Art, New York (Oct. 26 – Jan. 21), and with a show of recent work at Paula Cooper Gallery (Nov. 30 – Jan. 6). The exhibition’s foundations are in Piper’s early studies from the sixties in which she conceptualised drawing as a medium. Influenced partly by such artists Barnett Newman, Jasper Johns and Sol LeWitt, as well as academic figure studies, she established the formal vocabulary which she has employed in her art throughout the last 30 years. Drawing about Paper (1967) explore materiality and modernist formalism, Writing about Words (1967) take the form of concrete poetry, where personal subjects matter is subjected to a system translating content into visual form. Charted Work Proposal (1968) maps her artistic activities in the following year, on a grid with time and space coordinates; her figure studies (some of them under the influence of LSD) represent both academic pursuits and an interest in the body as an actor and a medium. All of these pieces are executed with the same coolly analytical sensibility. In Vanilla Nightmares (1986 – 1990), a series of drawings executed on newspaper pages, figures are altered or inserted to relate to and undermine information structures and content. In the Decide Who You Are series, (1992), poetry and monologues, either angry or defensive, share grid space with white authority figures, policemen, domestic and violent scenes. Two recurring images: a photograph of a young Anita Hill, and a drawing of three apes each covering ears, eyes or mouth (not seeing, not hearing, not speaking), comment ironically on the activities of the other figures, and together describe the economic and political situation in America and the world in 1992, and 8 years later.
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