Paul Thek
21 October 2010 - 09 January 2011
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| Paul Thek, Warrior’s Arm, 1967, from the series Technological Reliquaries
© The Estate of George Paul Thek; courtesy of Alexander and Bonin, New York. Photograph by Jason Mandella |
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PAUL THEK
Diver, a Retrospective
21 October - 9 January 2011
Paul Thek: Diver, a Retrospective is the first retrospective in the
United States devoted to the legendary American artist Paul Thek
(1933-1988). A sculptor, painter, and one of the first artists to create
environments or installations, Thek came to recognition showing his
sculpture in New York galleries in the 1960s. The first works exhibited,
which he began making in 1964 and called "meat pieces” as they were
meant to resemble flesh, were encased in Plexiglas boxes that recall
Minimal sculptures. At the end of the sixties, Thek left for Europe,
where he created extraordinary environments, incorporating elements from
art, literature, theater, and religion, often employing fragile and
ephemeral substances, including wax and latex. After a decade, at the
end of the seventies, Thek changed direction, moved back to New York,
and turned to the making of small, sketch-like paintings on canvas,
although he continued to create environments in key international
exhibitions. With his frequent use of highly perishable materials, Thek
accepted the ephemeral nature of his art works—and was aware, as writer
Gary Indiana has noted, of "a sense of our own transience and that of
everything around us.” With loans of work never before seen in the US,
this exhibition is intended to introduce Thek to a broader American
audience.
Paul Thek: Diver, a Retrospective is co-organized by Elisabeth Sussman,
Sondra Gilman Curator of Photography at the Whitney Museum of American
Art, and Lynn Zelevansky, the Henry J. Heinz II Director of Carnegie
Museum of Art, Pittsburgh.
www.whitney.org |