6 Sep 2014 - 4 Jan 2015
With almost two hundred drawings and paintings Marlene Dumas –
The Image as Burden is the first major solo exhibition of
Dumas in the Netherlands in 20 years. A unique survey of the remarkable oeuvre
of Marlene Dumas. This retrospective exhibition brings together over one
hundred of her most important works, from the late 1970s to the present day.
With almost two hundred drawings and paintings from private and museum
collections throughout the world, Marlene Dumas – The Image as Burden
is the first major solo exhibition of Dumas in the Netherlands in 20 years. It
is the most comprehensive retrospective survey of her work in Europe to date
and presents a compelling overview of her oeuvre from the late 1970s to the
present. In addition to her most important and iconic works, the exhibition
also presents lesser-known paintings and drawings, including many works never
before seen in the Netherlands, and a selection of her most recent paintings.
The title of the exhibition is derived from the work The Image as Burden
(1993), which refers to the conflict between the painterly gesture and the
illusion of the painted image.
The Stedelijk presentation features a number of exclusive highlights,
such as a gallery devoted to drawings that have come straight from her studio,
which have rarely – if ever – been on public view, and the 100-piece series Models
from the collection of the Van Abbemuseum. The survey at the Stedelijk also
places greater emphasis on the works produced between 1976 and 1982, when
Dumas’s career in Amsterdam began.
After many years, the key work in her oeuvre, Love vs Death (1980),
which opens the exhibition, is once again on display. Also included are a
selection of Dumas’s most recent paintings, such as The Widow and Nuclear
Family, both from 2013, and a number of watercolor drawings from the series
Great Men (2014), the remainder of which is currently on view at
Manifesta in St. Petersburg.
The exhibition closely examines the key themes and motifs that Dumas
has developed throughout her artistic career. Special attention is devoted to
the works on paper that Dumas produced in the early years after her arrival in
the Netherlands, when she also exhibited her work for the first time at the
Stedelijk Museum and Museum Fodor (1978-81). Themes such as love, death and
longing, and the use of texts and images found in the mass media – which are
also explored in her late paintings – are evident in these early works, too.
About Marlene Dumas
Marlene Dumas is considered one of the most significant and
influential painters working today. With her work, she gives new content to the
meaning that painting can still have today, in an era dominated by visual
culture. Her intense, emotionally charged paintings and drawings address
existentialist themes and often reference art historical motifs and current
political issues.
Dumas often finds inspiration in newspaper and magazine images from
her immense visual archive. The artist believes that the endless stream of
photographic images that bombards us every day influences how we see each other
and the world around us. Dumas addresses this onslaught by revealing the psychological,
social, and political aspects of these images. Her drawings and paintings have
an enormous directness and expressiveness, which the artist couples with a
certain analytical distance. Dumas does not shy away from controversial topics.
In both her visual work and her writings, Dumas reflects on contemporary
painting and what it means to be an artist.
Marlene Dumas was born in 1953 in Cape Town, South Africa. She came to
the Netherlands in the ‘70s to study at Ateliers ’63 in Haarlem. On completing
her study, Dumas settled in Amsterdam, where she still lives and works. In
recent years, Dumas has held important exhibitions in the United States (New
York, Houston and Los Angeles), South Africa, Germany and Japan, and elsewhere.
Her work is represented in the collections of numerous distinguished museums
and private collectors throughout the world. Dumas is the recipient of many
prestigious art awards, the most recent being the Johannes Vermeer Prize
(2012).
Catalogue
The exhibition is accompanied by a special publication compiled by the
three curators of the exhibition Leontine Coelewij, Kerryn Greenberg and
Theodora Vischer. Structured along a strict chronology, the publication traces
developments in the oeuvre of Marlene Dumas from the 1970s to the present day.
The 196-page catalogue also contains writings by the artist, a number of new
texts, short existing texts and interviews, and some 200 illustrations. The
publication is designed by Dutch designer Roger Willems and published by Tate
Publishing. The catalogue is published in three languages: Dutch, English and
German, price: € 25,-.
Exhibition organized by the Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam in
collaboration with Tate Modern, London and Fondation Beyeler, Riehen/Basel
The exhibition at the Stedelijk Museum is curated by Stedelijk curator
Leontine Coelewij and occupies a circuit of around fifteen galleries on the
upper floor of the historic building of the Stedelijk Museum. The exhibition
covers approximately 1000 square meters.
www.stedelijk.nl/en/exhibitions/marlene-dumas-the-image-as-burden#sthash.ni0y1v1X.dpuf
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