Portraits
October 20, 2007- November 17, 2007
531 W 24th St
Luhring Augustine is pleased to present Portraits, a group exhibition of painting, photography,
video and sculpture exploring modern and contemporary practices in the genre of portraiture.
In its most literal manifestation, a portrait is a visual representation of an individual. Typically
rendered from a frontal or profile view, traditional portraits were commissioned paintings or
sculptures reserved for the highest echelons of society as a means of portraying substantial
wealth and power. With the advent of photography in the nineteenth-century, the concept of the
portrait was popularized and expanded to include a variety of sub-groups and viewpoints.
Contemporary artists have broadened the scope of portraiture beyond the mere depiction of
likeness or personality to investigate metaphor, history, cultural archetypes and the politics of
identity.
Yasumasa Morimura’s Doublonnage (Marcel) features the artist replicating Man Ray’s famous
photograph of Marcel Duchamp in the guise of his feminine alter ego Rrose Sélavy. The original
portrait explores the notion of alternate personas, androgyny and gender identity. By
appropriating and then altering an iconic portrait, Morimura re-examines these issues and
challenges the Western canon of art history to incorporate an Eastern point of view.
Johannes Kahrs’ pair of portraits entitled Untitled (auslöschung nr. 2) and Untitled (auslöschung
nr. 3) are at once classical and utterly contemporary. His compositions and the use of a threequarter
profile view are reminiscent of Renaissance and Baroque portraits, yet the resigned
stance and blank face of the young male subject are reflective of the modern condition.
Auslöschung translates to ‘extinction’ and one senses Kahrs’ preoccupation with the anonymity of
adolescence and the loss of individuality in the face of overwhelming pressure to conform.
Janine Antoni’s Mortar & Pestle is a metaphor for a portrait in its depiction of the artist in relation
to her husband. Antoni attempts to literally experience her partner’s loving gaze by licking his
eyeball. At once visceral and intensely intimate, the portrait explores identity as a construct
defined by interpersonal exchange. Likewise,
Felix Gonzalez-Torres’ word portrait examines
identity in terms of historical events, both private and public. By selecting an institution as his
subject as well as dispensing entirely with image in favor of text, Torres subverts the traditional
concept of the portrait.
Portraits also includes several images of artists by artists, such as
Francesco Clemente’s painting
of Tunga,
Richard Hamilton’s digital print of Dieter Roth and
Louise Lawler’s photograph of an
Andy Warhol self-portrait, all of which explore the notion of the artist as persona. These particular
portraits both benefit from and contribute to the celebrity and legacy of their subjects.
This exhibition also includes works by
John Baldessari,
Larry Clark,
George Condo,
John Currin,
Martin Kippenberger,
Robert Mapplethorpe,
Jonathan Meese,
Daido Moriyama,
Jack Pierson,
Pipilotti Rist,
Cindy Sherman,
Joel Sternfeld,
Hiroshi Sugimoto, Tunga and
Andy Warhol.
Books and DVDs related to artists in this show| Location | | | Gallery | Luhring Augustine Gallery | | Address | 531 W 24th St New York (Chelsea) NY, 10011 United States | | Phone | 212-206-9100 | | Fax | 212-206-9055 | | Hours | Tue-Sat 10-6 | |
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