The exhibition is on view
at The Museum of Modern Art through February 18, 2019, and at MoMA PS1 through
February 25, 2019.
Bruce Nauman has spent half
a century inventing forms to convey both the moral hazards and the thrill of
being alive. Employing a tremendous range of materials and working methods, he
reveals how mutable experiences of time, space, movement, and language provide
an unstable foundation for understanding our place in the world. For Nauman,
both making and looking at art involve “doing things that you don’t
particularly want to do, putting yourself in unfamiliar situations, following
resistances to find out why you’re resisting.” At a time when the notion of
truth feels increasingly under attack, his work compels viewers to relinquish
the safety of the familiar, keeping us alert, ever vigilant, and wary of being
seduced by easy answers.
Nauman’s art has always
defied categorization. Delicate watercolors, flashing neon signs, sound
installations, video corridors—he is constantly shifting between all these and
more, never conforming to a signature style. But underneath this sheer variety,
crucial themes persist, and disappearance has been one such recurring impulse
over his 50-year career.
Disappearing Acts traces
what Nauman has called “withdrawal as an art form”—both literal and figurative
incidents of removal, deflection, and concealment. Bodies are fragmented,
centers are left empty, voices emanate from hidden speakers, and the artist
sculpts himself in absentia, appearing only as negative space. The
retrospective charts these forms of omission and loss across media and
throughout the decades, following Nauman as he circles back to earlier concerns
with new urgency. Presented in two complementary parts, at The Museum of Modern
Art and MoMA PS1, this is the most comprehensive exhibition of the artist’s
work ever assembled.
The exhibition was on view
at Schaulager, Basel, March 17–August 26, 2018.
https://www.moma.org/calendar/exhibitions/3852
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