-
Moderna Museet Presents 50 Years of Paintings by Ed Ruscha
Written by Chester Gnome Monday, 31 May 2010 20:34
STOCKHOLM.- Ed Ruscha, born in 1937, is an icon of modern art and exceedingly prolific to this day. His paintings are ambiguous and provocative, recycling scraps from popular culture and redefining established genres. Is he one of the first pop artists, a trail-blazer of conceptual art, a late surrealist, a pioneer of postmodernism, or a bit of everything, all rolled into one? On view in Stockholm 29 May 2010 through 5 September 2010 at The Moderna Museet, Stockholm.
Ed Ruscha started
out in graphic design, photography and film-making; ever since he left the
Midwest for California, however, painting has been his main focus. This
exhibition presents works ranging from his debut at the famous Ferus Gallery in
Los Angeles, Documenta Kassel and the Venice Biennale, to the present day, when
new generations are discovering his radical oeuvre.
The ostensibly commonplace subject matter, as though taken from an advertising campaign or shot from the driver’s seat, is inserted in new painterly contexts: early portraits of words, absurdly realistic paintings of mountain ranges and petrol stations, and later, more monumental works where complete sentences are contrasted against a dreamlike background. His works reveal a characteristic fascination for the power and enigma of language, and feature sharp paradoxes, ambiguities and contradictions.
Ed Ruscha shifts the meaning of what we see, right before our eyes, and says: The most an artist can do is to start something and not give the whole story. That’s what makes mystery.
The exhibition is largely hung in chronological order and the paintings are grouped thematically. Between these themes, new connections arise; many mutual bonds have been made in the course of half a century of painting. Ed Ruscha’s oeuvre shows a strong consistency; his method of rummaging through our culture for material makes this exhibition an incisive and ever-morphing portrayal of Los Angeles, and thus, in a broader sense, of our time.
Exhibition organised by Hayward Gallery, Southbank Centre, London in association with Moderna Museet, Stockholm.
Visit : www.modernamuseet.se/en/Stockholm/
Click on logo below to add this article to your favorite Social Website ~









