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Thursday, April 2, 2026 |
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| John Baldessari: Somewhere Between Almost Right |
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John Baldessari. Beast (Orange) Being Stared At:
With Two Figures (Green, Blue), 2004. Photo: Deutsche Guggenheim. © 2004 John Baldessari.
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BERLIN, GERMANY.- The Deutsche Guggenheim presents in its exhibition space on Unter den Linden until January 16, 2005, the commissioned work Somewhere Between Almost Right and Not Quite (With Orange) by the American artist John Baldessari. With this cycle of thirteen works, among the artists largest to date, the Deutsche Guggenheim continues, after the presentation of the works Acht Grau (Eight Grey) by Gerhard Richter, its series of projects commissioned for its own spaces.
American artist John Baldessari rose to prominence in the late 1960s combining Pop Arts use of imagery from the mass media with Conceptual Arts use of language to create a unique body of work that has become a hallmark of postmodern art. Early in his career, Baldessari began incorporating images and texts in his photo-based art. He appropriated pictures from advertising and movie stills, juxtaposing, editing, and cropping them in conjunction with written texts. His resulting montages of photography and language often counter the narrative associations suggested by the isolated scenes and offers a greater plurality of meanings. The layered, often humorous compositions carry disparate connotations, underscoring how relative meaning can be.
It was during the 1970s that Baldessari began to utilize other peoples photographs in his work rather than his own snapshots: What got me interested in found imagery was that it was not considered art, but just imagery, and I began dumpster diving in photo shops. Finding that film stills, as well as publicity shots and press materials, were readily available, Baldessari gathered images in abundance.
Understanding how these photographs could suggest narratives, Baldessari began to use film stills more and more. He created work from sequences of these found images by bringing together related or disparate photographs, sometimes in a grid, sometimes in linear or freely arranged compositions, but always with some structure or concept underscoring the arrangement.
By the 1980s Baldessari favored using appropriated images without text. By relying on arrangements of photographs and entirely removing written text, Baldessari demonstrated that pictures alone could deliver the same narrative message that his previous text-and-image composites had so effectively conveyed. By the mid-1980s Baldessari adopted the technique of concealing a face by placing a colored adhesive dot over it. This technique simultaneously flattened the image and emphasized the illusion of the scene. By obscuring a face (or later, a body part) Baldessari was able to erase individuality and transform a specific person into an obscure object. The white dots used in the first of these works were eventually replaced by colored dots, coded so that Baldessari could get multiple layers of meaningred signaling danger, green for safety, and so on.
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