Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac is pleased to present Joseph Beuys: Utopia at the Stag Monuments, the most comprehensive exhibition of Joseph Beuys’ work in London in a quarter century. Curated by Norman Rosenthal, who worked with Joseph Beuys on many exhibitions from 1970 onwards, the exhibition brings together pivotal works from various stages of his life, revealing the extent to which Joseph Beuys’ ideas were clearly defined from the very beginning of his artistic career.
"In a world that is now more than ever searching for new solutions for basic social and economic problems, a sense of new ways forward might be found in the ideas of societal rebirth that arise from the Stag Monuments." Norman Rosenthal
For the first time since its creation, most of the elements of Joseph Beuys' seminal work known as Hirschdenkmäler (Stag Monuments) will be brought together, offering a far-reaching insight into his artistic practice. The exhibition takes its name from this environment, created for the legendary 1982 Berlin exhibition Zeitgeist, co-curated by Christos M. Joachimides and Norman Rosenthal himself.
Joseph Beuys notoriously proclaimed: every man is an artist. The statement, taken in context, refers to Joseph Beuys’ belief in the potential of art and creativity to enable the fruition of his utopian vision, a social organism as a work of art. He subscribed to an interdisciplinary concept, eliminating the barriers between art and life.
Joseph Beuys: Utopia at the Stag Monuments will be seen through a retrospective lens; it includes masterpieces apart from Hirschdenkmäler (Stag Monuments), including Feldbett (Campaign Bed), 1982, Kleines Kraftwerk (Small Power Station), 1984, and Infiltration-homogen für Cello (Infiltration-homogenous for Cello), 1966-85, alongside early drawings, sculptures and extraordinary early photographs from the late 40s and early 50s.
A catalogue will accompany the exhibition with an essay by Norman Rosenthal.