17th of October 2014 to 26th of January 2015
In cooperation with the Kunsthaus Zürich and the Alberto Giacometti
Foundation, Zurich
With the exhibition »Alberto Giacometti. Modernist Pioneer« the Leopold
Museum shines the spotlight on an artist who is widely considered to be the
most important sculptor of the 20th century. The works of Alberto Giacometti
(1901 – 1966) are among the most expensive artworks in the world. As recently
as 2010 his work »L‘homme qui marche l« fetched the astronomical sum of 74
million Euros at Sotheby's in London, the highest price ever paid for a
sculpture.
Born in the Italian-speaking part of Switzerland, Giacometti moved to Paris
in the early 1920s, where he initially joined the circle of artists surrounding
André Breton. In the exhibition Giacometti’s Surrealist works are juxtaposed
with works from the same period created by his friends and acquaintances, including
René Magritte, Max Ernst and Joan Miró. Following his break with the
Surrealists in 1935, Giacometti arrived at the inimitable style of his mature
period during the 1940s. While he refocused on representational depictions of
human figures, he did so in an entirely unique manner characterized by striking
changes in proportions. Many of these works have a strong three-dimensional
effect which is highlighted in the exhibition through the special positioning
and staging of his works. At the same time, Giacometti’s sculptures, paintings
and drawings will be juxtaposed with works by masters of International
Modernism, including Francis Bacon, Jackson Pollock and Cy Twombly.
http://www.leopoldmuseum.org/en/exhibitions/57/alberto-giacometti
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