Tony Cragg 'New sculptures'
April 14 - June 18, 2011
We are pleased to announce our fifth exhibition of works by the
British sculptor Tony Cragg (*1949). This is the artist's first solo
exhibition in our Salzburg gallery.
Tony Cragg is one of the most distinguished contemporary sculptors.
Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac is showing 20 new sculptures of steel,
bronze and wood, to coincide with two major museum exhibitions: in
the Cour Marly, the Cour Puget and in I. M. Pei's glass pyramid at the
Paris Louvre, eleven new sculptures under the title Figure Out –
Figure In are currently on show, juxtaposed with the monumental
17th- 18th- and 19th-century French sculptures. This exhibition is to
run until autumn of this year. Concurrently, the Küppersmühle
Museum in Duisburg is showing the major Cragg retrospective Dinge
im Kopf, Things on the Mind until 13 June.
Cragg's sculptural oeuvre was originally motivated by his study of English Land Art and Performance,
and is still distinguished by a immense wealth of surprising formal inventions and combinations. Cragg
sees himself as a materialist, constantly seeking to explore and expand new materials. Stacking,
layering and heaping have always been strategies in which he takes diverse existing materials and
everyday objects, and gives them an unexpected interpretation. Here it is primarily steel, bronze and
wood that he uses for his almost geologically layered arrangements.
In recent years, heads and faces have been appearing like leitmotivs in Cragg's work. A morphing
circular movement shapes the rhythm of the sculptures. Overlapping, layering and convolution give
rise to body landscapes forming positives and negatives, asserting a form and at the same time
mapping out their vacant spaces. Cragg develops his forms from "artistic sediments that appear to
arise from different time zones" (Eva Maria Stadler, 2008). Recurring forms are stacked into
surrealistic totem-like pillars. The horizontal extension of the biomorphic form is reminiscent of futurist
Italian speed freaks like Umberto Boccioni and Giacomo Balla, while the verticality of his pillar-like
sculptures brings to mind Constantin Brancusi, who similarly "arrived at a reduction of the natural form
through his abstract formal language" (Michael Krapf, 2008). Nature with all its structures, from micro
to macro, is the dominant theme of Tony Cragg's works over the past ten years.
Cragg "starts from a transoptic, imaginary view. He enlarges structures and objects, blending the view
through the microscope with the measure of the world. The change in dimension reacts against the
usual forms, thus eliminating any idea of function" (Werner Spies, 2011).
Tony Cragg was born in Liverpool in 1949 and has lived in Wuppertal since 1977. He began his
studies at the Gloucestershire College of Art and Design, then attended the painting class at the
Wimbledon School of Art, before changing his course to the Royal College of Art in London in 1973.
Since the 1980s his work has been represented at many important international exhibitions, including
documenta 7 and 8 in Kassel (1982 and 1987), Sao Paulo Biennial (1983) and Venice Biennale (1993
and 1997). In 1988 he was awarded the Turner Prize, and in 1992 he was made a Chevalier des Arts
et Lettres. From 1979 he taught at the Düsseldorf Academy of Art, where he became professor in
1988, and in 2001 he was appointed Professor of Sculpture at the Berlin Academy of Arts.
Since 1994 he has been a member of the Royal Academy of Arts, London, and since 2002 a member
of the Academy of Arts, Berlin; that same year he was elevated to the status of Commander of the
British Empire (CBE). In 2007, Tony Cragg received what is probably the most prestigious art prize in
the world, the Praemium Imperiale. In 2009 he succeeded Markus Lüpertz as Rector of the Düsseldorf
Academy of Art.
During the 1980s, solo exhibitions of his work were increasingly held in important institutions such as
the Kunsthalle Bern (1983), Lousiana Museum Humlebæk (1984), Brooklyn Museum, New York
(1988), North Rhine-Westphalia Art Collection (1989), Art Institute of Chicago (1990), Reina Sofia,
Madrid (1995), Von der Heydt-Museum, Wuppertal (1999), Tate Gallery, Liverpool (2000), Art and
Exhibition Hall of the Federal Republic of Germany, Bonn (2003), Neues Museum, Nuremberg (2005),
Lehmbruck Museum, Duisburg (2007), Belvedere, Vienna (2008), Staatlichen Kunsthalle, Karlsruhe
and Salzburg Museum of Modern Art (2009).
For further informations please contact:
Dr Arne Ehmann, [email protected], +43 (0) 66288139317