Brice Marden
Larry Gagosian celebrates the unmatched life and legacy of Brice Marden.
The marble not yet carved can hold the form of every thought the greatest artist has.
—Michelangelo
Gagosian is pleased to present an exhibition that explores the enduring fascination of marble, beginning with ancient idols and moving on through classical and Renaissance statuary to twentieth-century and contemporary sculpture.
A sensual yet resilient natural material, marble has over time developed a rich visual vocabulary together with a constantly mutating symbolism. Our Neolithic ancestors carved it into primal representations of the human form. These ritual figures and vessels—strong, simple, abstract shapes—were dictated in part by the innate form of the excavated stone and the rudimentary tools available to work it. The Ancient Greeks and Romans worshipped marble and utilized it in all manner of civic edification, both architectural and sculptural, whereas in medieval times, it was vilified as idolatry by zealous clerics. During the Renaissance and on through the Enlightenment, it became charged with newly expressionistic significance. Twentieth-century and contemporary artists have tended to invert, shift, and play with all these approaches and their references, rendering marble ironic, enigmatic, and at times even incongruous. Thus marble links various spiritual and secular artistic traditions as they have reinvented themselves throughout history, just as the powerful aura that it exudes transcends time and change.
In this exhibition, Anatolian and Cycladic idols presage the modernist abstractions and biomorphic forms of Hans Arp, Constantin Brancusi, Alberto Giacometti, Barbara Hepworth, Henry Moore, Anish Kapoor, and Isamu Noguchi. A delicately carved Renaissance head, once belonging to Andy Warhol, prefigures the tongue-in-cheek gravitas of Jeff Koons’s elaborately crafted (self-)creation myth. The austere geometries of works by Carl Andre, Jenny Holzer, and Marc Newson are echoed in an exquisite painted marble fragment by Brice Marden, providing yet another counterpoint to this rich ensemble.
The latent potential of every block of marble is a challenge to artists of all generations. Its resilience defies the transient tools of modern communication through symbolism, ritual, spirituality, and desire. Embedded in cultural history, marble presents infinite possibilities for future transformation, as expressed most eloquently by Isamu Noguchi: “I am beset with doubts about the values of art as we go into the electronic age. We are all swept up in its current. Where all we see is change I like to think that sculpture may have in this a special role—as an antidote to impermanence—with newness, yes, but with a quality of enduring freshness relative to that resonant void, within us and without, not to end only as another phenomenon of our times. But this, of course, is what art is.”
Larry Gagosian celebrates the unmatched life and legacy of Brice Marden.
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Four paintings by Brice Marden have been incorporated into a new dance commission based on T. S. Eliot’s Four Quartets, with choreography by Pam Tanowitz, and music by Kaija Saariaho. The performance will premiere on July 6, 2018 at the Richard B. Fisher Center for the Performing Arts at Bard as part of the SummerScape Festival. Gideon Lester, the Fisher Center’s artistic director for theater and dance, spoke with Marden about the canvases that form the set design.
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