Marlene Dumas: Against the Wall

Publisher: David Zwirner Books

Publish Date: 2014

Text by Marlene Dumas

Described by Deborah Solomon in a New York Times profile as “one of contemporary art’s most compelling painters,” Marlene Dumas has continuously explored the complex range of human emotions, often probing questions of gender, race, sexuality, and economic inequality through her dramatic and at times haunting figural compositions. Originally published in 2010 on the occasion of Against the Wall, Dumas’s first solo presentation at David Zwirner in New York, this much sought-after exhibition catalogue—which sold out shortly after publication—has been reprinted to coincide with the artist’s 2014–2015 European retrospective exhibition The Image as Burden, organized by Tate Modern, London in collaboration with the Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam and the Fondation Beyeler, Basel.

Throughout her career, the internationally renowned artist has continually created lyrically charged compositions that eulogize the frailties of the human body, probing issues of love and melancholy. At times her subjects are more topical, merging socio-political themes with personal experience and art-historical antecedents to reflect unique perspectives on the most salient and controversial issues facing contemporary society. The large-scale works included in Against the Wall are primarily based on media imagery and newspaper clippings documenting the conflict between Israel and Palestine, exploring the tension between the photographic documentation of reality and the constructed, imaginary space of painting. The Wall, the painting that began the series, at first appears to present a scene at the Western Wall (also known as the Wailing Wall), an important site of religious pilgrimage located in Jerusalem. However, this work is based upon a photograph from a newspaper that portrayed a group of Orthodox Jews on their way to pray at Rachel’s Tomb in Bethlehem. Through her delicate treatment of every scene, Dumas destabilizes preconceived notions about what, in fact, is being pictured—engaging the often ambiguous nature of ideas like truth or justice. “In a sense they are my first landscape paintings,” Dumas further notes in the catalogue, “or should I say ‘territory paintings.’ That is why they are so big.” The somber color plates reproduced in the publication are given context by Dumas’s own musings, a text framed as a letter to David Zwirner in which she tries to tell him “about the ‘why’ ” of this powerful series.

Details

Publisher: David Zwirner Books

Artist: Marlene Dumas

Contributors: Marlene Dumas

Publication Date: 2014

ISBN: 9781941701003

Retail: $45 US & Canada | £27 | €37

Status: Not Available

Designer: David Chickey, Skolkin/Chickey

Printer: Editoriale Bortolazzi Stei, Verona, Italy

Binding: Hardcover

Dimensions: 9 1/2 x 12 1/2 in (24.1 x 31.8 cm)

Pages: 72

Reproductions: 30 color

Artist and Contributors

Marlene Dumas

Marlene Dumas (b. 1953) is regarded as one of the most influential painters working today. Her paintings and drawings, often devoted to depictions of the human form, are typically culled from the artist’s vast archive of images, including art historical materials, mass media sources, and personal snapshots of friends and family. Gestural, fluid, and frequently spectral, Dumas’s works reframe and re-contextualize her subjects, exploring the boundaries between public and private selves.

Marlene Dumas

Since the late 1970s and early 1980s, Marlene Dumas’s (b. 1953) work has been prominently featured in solo and group exhibitions around the world. In 2008, a critically acclaimed retrospective, Marlene Dumas: Measuring Your Own Grave, was organized by the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, in association with The Museum of Modern Art, New York, which also toured to The Melin Collection, Houston, in 2009. In 2014, the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam presented Marlene Dumas: The Image as Burden, which traveled to Tate Modern, London, and Fondation Beyeler, Basel, in 2015. Opening in September 2018, the artist has curated an exhibition of her work alongside that of Edvard Munch and René Daniëls at the Munch Museum in Oslo.

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