Felix Gonzalez-Torres
Publisher: David Zwirner Books
Publication Date: 2018
Text by David Breslin
One of the most significant artists to emerge in the late 1980s and early 1990s, Felix Gonzalez-Torres’s reduced formal vocabulary, conceptual rigor, and evocative use of everyday materials resonates with meaning that is at once specific and mutable, rigorous and generous, poetic and political.
Featuring several key bodies of work from throughout the artist's career, this publication showcases a series of distinct installations at David Zwirner in New York in 2017. The interplay with the specific architecture of the gallery and the way works are installed is highlighted throughout the catalogue, with images that explore the poetics of how space and work influence each other. Together, in their radical openness to interventions of site, audience, and context, the works on view challenge perceived notions of what constitutes an exhibition space, a public, an artwork itself. Despite the resolute abstraction of much of his work, Gonzalez-Torres worked with familiar materials, from his iconic candy spill works and his evocative light string pieces, but also including mirrors, clocks, and curtains. His work activates the architecture of the various spaces, the physicality of the viewer, the past and present, continuously maintaining its relevance.
Opening with details of the exhibition and images of visitors in the spaces, the publication walks the reader through each piece. New text by David Breslin explores the variety of works included here while contextualizing Gonzalez-Torres's contribution to art history.
Details
Publisher: David Zwirner Books
Artist: Felix Gonzalez-Torres
Contributors: David Breslin
Publication Date: 2018
ISBN: 9781941701768
Retail: $45 | £35
Status: Available
Designer: Michael Dyer / Remake
Printer: VeronaLibri, Verona
Binding: Hardcover
Dimensions: 8.5 × 11.75 in | 21.6 × 29.8 cm
Pages: 112
Reproductions: 62 illustrations
Artist and Contributors
Felix Gonzalez-Torres
Felix Gonzalez-Torres (1957–1996) was one of the most significant artists to emerge in the late 1980s and early 1990s. In its reduced formal vocabulary, conceptual rigor, and evocative use of everyday materials, the artist’s work resonates with meaning that is at once specific and mutable, rigorous and generous, poetic and poltical.
David Breslin
David Breslin is the DeMartini Family Curator and Director of the Collection at the Whitney Museum of American Art. Prior to joining the Whitney, Breslin was the John R. Eckel, Jr. Foundation Chief Curator at the Menil Drawing Institute in Houston, Texas. Breslin has organized exhibitions such as Raw Color: The Circles of David Smith and Monet | Kelly and co-curated Make It New: Abstract Painting from the National Gallery of Art, 1950-1975 and An Incomplete History of Protest: Selections from the Whitney’s Collection, 1940-2017. Breslin has written essays on the work of Valentin Carron, Jenny Holzer, Cady Noland, Pablo Picasso, and Paul Thek, among others.
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