Cristin Tierney Gallery is pleased to present Midwest, an exhibition of recent digital
projection works by Victor Burgin that focus on an oft-mythologized region of the
United States. Understood by many to be representative of the larger nation, the
Midwest is frequently on the lips and minds of politicians, pundits, and journalists
during election cycles. Given the surreal and chaotic presidential politics of 2016,
Burgin’s work offers us the opportunity to examine another part of the rich and
complicated history of the heartland. Midwest will be on view from September 8th to
October 22nd, with an opening reception on Thursday, September 8th, from 6:00 to
8:00 pm. This is Burgin’s first solo exhibition in New York since 2005, and he will be
present at the reception.
Burgin’s recent work focuses on the way specific architectural sites are mediated
through memory and fantasy; the way “space” becomes “place.” Using digital tools, he
creates verisimilar, hybrid models of image and text that constitute both a virtual and a psychological portrait of a site. Prairie, for example, describes the history of “The
Mecca” apartment building, built in 1892 and destroyed almost sixty years later when
Mies van der Rohe undertook a redesign and expansion of the Illinois Institute of
Design. Combining images and descriptions of van der Rohe’s Crown Hall with those
of former Mecca residents, Prairie unearths an erased history, revealing the close links
between memory and space.
In Mirror Lake, Burgin contrasts the history of Frank Lloyd Wright’s Seth Peterson
Cottage, located in what is now Mirror Lake State Park, Wisconsin, with that of the
Winnebago culture and tribe, which was forcefully relocated from that same area to
Nebraska in the late 19th century. Burgin’s work positions such architectural sites as
the crystallization of our wishes and fears about the past, present, and future. The
forgotten stories he illuminates, whether real or imagined, underscore that the built
environment is not an isolated, physical construct, but rather a shifting perception
layered with many different cultural histories.
Midwest runs concurrent with two other US exhibitions of Burgin’s work. UK76, which features
the artist’s historic photo-text work, opens September 8th at Bridget Donahue, 99 Bowery 2nd
Floor, New York. On September 15th, the Slought Foundation, in coordination with the
University of Pennsylvania and Bryn Mawr College, opens Then and Now, which includes
Burgin’s significant historic photo-text series US 77 and three recent digital projection works.
Burgin will participate in a public conversation with the curators Kaja Silverman and Homay
King at Slought’s opening on September 15th from 6:30 to 8:30 pm.
Victor Burgin first came to prominence in the late 1960s as one of the originators of
Conceptual Art. His work appeared in such key exhibitions as Harald Szeemann's Live
in Your Head: When Attitudes Become Form (1969) at the ICA London, and Kynaston
McShine's Information (1970) at The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Since then, he
has had solo exhibitions at the Museum für Gegenwartkunst Siegen, Kunsthalle
Bremerhaven, MAMCO Musée d’art moderne et contemporain, Canadian Centre for
Architecture, Mücsarnok Museum, University at Buffalo Art Gallery, Musée d’art
moderne Villeneuve d’Ascq, The List Visual Arts Center, Renaissance Society at the
University of Chicago, Musée de la Ville de Calais, The Museum of Modern Art in
Oxford, and Stedelijk van Abbemuseum in Eindhoven. His work appears in the
collections of The Museum of Modern Art, The New York Public Library, The Walker Art
Center, The Tate Gallery, The Victoria and Albert Museum, The Los Angeles County
Museum of Art, The Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles, Museum Ludwig,
Fotomuseum Winterthur, Musée national d’art moderne, Sammlung Falckenberg, and
The Arts Council Collection in London.
Burgin graduated from the School of Painting at the Royal College of Art, London, in
1965, and then went on to study Philosophy and Fine Art at Yale University School of
Art and Architecture, where his teachers included Robert Morris and Donald Judd.
Burgin is Professor Emeritus of History of Consciousness at the University of California,
Santa Cruz and Emeritus Millard Chair of Fine Art at Goldsmiths College, London. He
was recently a Mellon Fellow and Visiting Professor in the Department of Cinema and
Media Studies at the University of Chicago, where he produced Prairie for the Chicago
Architecture Biennial. He lives and works in Gascony and Paris.