Luhring Augustine is pleased to announce its first solo exhibition of the pioneering Brazilian artist Lygia Clark.
Organized in partnership with Alison Jacques Gallery, London, which co-represents the artist, this exhibition
will feature Clark’s early drawings, collages, and paintings, as well as her iconic Bichos.
Lygia Clark (Belo Horizonte, Brazil, 1920 - Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 1988) is one of the preeminent artists of the
twentieth century, whose groundbreaking body of work reimagined the relationship between audience and the
art object. A founding member of the Brazilian Neo-Concrete movement, Clark proposed a radical approach to
thinking about painting by treating its pictorial surface as if it were a three-dimensional architectural space. Her
studies under the Brazilian landscape architect Roberto Burle Marx and the French modernist painter Fernand
Léger were deeply influential in this regard. Throughout her lifetime, Clark would remain a seminal figure of the
international avant-garde, impacting future generations of artists with her transformative ideas surrounding the
body, its presence and agency within a given environment.
Experimenting with modulations of form, color, and plane, Clark’s early abstract works challenged the canvas’
edge and extended the visual field of painting into the physical realm of the viewer. Her monochromatic
compositions are adorned with interlocking shapes that explore various relationships, moving between figureground
positions as they undergo perspectival shifts. Line and its properties are at the core of Clark’s
investigations into positive and negative space. Through the interplay of adjacent and overlapping planes, she
demonstrated that contours could delimit spatial fields as well as occupy the narrow voids in between.
Lines delineating the two-dimensional surfaces of her paintings find affinities with the creases and folds of her
iconic Bichos, or critters. Constructed out of hinged metal planes, these versatile objects allowed for the
audience to exercise authorship through participation. Clark’s reliance on the viewer to steer her sculptures
through many possible configurations both jeopardized the autonomy of the art object and reconfigured her art
as a performative, time-based event. Their open-endedness and iterative qualities affirmed her desire to
overcome spatial and temporal boundaries, continuing to fulfill moments of continuity between artist, object,
and viewer.
Retrospective exhibitions dedicated to Lygia Clark’s work include the critically acclaimed exhibition Lygia Clark:
The Abandonment of Art 1948-1988, curated by Connie Butler and Luis Pérez-Oramas, at the Museum of
Modern Art, New York in 2014; Lygia Clark: A Retrospective, at the Itaú Cultural, São Paulo, Brazil in 2012;
and Lygia Clark, Fundació Antoni Tàpies, Barcelona in 1997, which travelled to the Musée d'Art Contemporain,
Marseille, France; Serralves Foundation, Porto, Portugal; Palais des Beaux-Arts, Brussels, Belgium; and the
Imperial Palace, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Important solo and group exhibitions during Clark’s lifetime include the
early São Paulo Biennials (1953-1967); the Second Pilot Show of Kinetic Work, curated by Guy Brett at
Signals Gallery, London in 1962; and a presentation, alongside Mira Schendel, at the XXXIV Bienale di
Venezia in 1968. Recent exhibitions include Making and Unmaking, at the Camden Arts Centre, London in
2016; Life Itself, at the Moderna Museet, Stockholm in 2016; Lygia Clark: Work from the 1950s at Alison
Jacques Gallery, London in 2016; and Adventures of the Black Square, Abstract Art and Society 1915-2015,
curated by Iwona Blazwick and Magnus Petersens at Whitechapel Art Gallery, London in 2015. A major
presentation of Clark’s work as part of The Shadow of Color, curated by Rita Kersting, is on view at The Israel
Museum in Jerusalem through April 2017. Clark’s work will be featured in the upcoming exhibitions Making Art
Concrete: Works from Argentina and Brazil in the Colección Patricia Phelps de Cisneros at the J. Paul Getty
Museum, Los Angeles, and Radical Women: Latin American Art, 1960-1985 at the Hammer Museum, Los
Angeles as part of the greater initiative Pacific Standard Time. Clark’s work is represented in the permanent
collections of the Museum of Modern Art, New York; the Art Institute of Chicago; Centre Pompidou, Paris; the
Reina Sofía Museum, Madrid; the São Paulo Museum of Modern Art; the Museum of Modern Art Rio de
Janeiro, among others.