VADUZ.- Born in Ireland in 1928, Brian ODoherty is among the most intriguing figures in contemporary art. In the exhibition Phases of the Self,
Kunstmuseum Liechtenstein presents the many different facets and identities of this artist, art critic and writer who lives in New York. In dialogue with works from the museums collection, the show affords an insight into the thinking of the second avant-garde from the 1960s onwards. On view is a selection of ODohertys early conceptual artworks along with books and magazines from his work as an art critic and writer.
Inside the White Cube a standard work of museology
In 1976, in his role as an art critic, ODoherty coined the term white cube in Artforum magazine, thereby writing an important chapter in recent art history. His essays, published later in book form, discuss and critique the alleged neutrality of white gallery and museum spaces = that would become internationally established as a model in the latter half of the twentieth century. Today, the book is among the essential works of Western museology.
Masks and pseudonyms
ODoherty assumed different roles and worked under various pseudonyms to broaden his field of action. As an artist, in protest to the United Kingdoms Northern Ireland policy, he signed his works as Patrick Ireland from 1972 until 2008, when a devolved Northern Ireland government was formed and peace had been restored. He also published art criticism in Art in America under the pseudonym Mary Josephson when he was the magazines editor.
An observer and commentator of the New York art scene
An astute observer, ODoherty not only reflects the sense of new departures in art and society in his art criticism of the 1960s, he also draws attention to the animosities and conflicts within the New York art scene he operated from its very centre. He discusses the implosion of aesthetic criteria and describes the ephemeral nature of trends and careers.
Brian ODoherty in a dialogue with the Kunstmuseum Liechtenstein collection
In the exhibition, ODohertys work engages in a dialogue with works from the Kunstmuseum Liechtensteins collection, including works by Marcel Duchamp, Joseph Cornell, Louise Bourgeois, Joseph Beuys, Marcel Broodthaers, Marisa Merz, Sol LeWitt, Walter Benjamin, Matts Leiderstam, Kimsooja, Erik Steinbrecher, Paweł Althamer, Saâdane Afif, Latifa Echakhch and Louise Guerra. Phases of the Self presents ODoherty as one of the pioneers of Conceptual art,demonstrating how his work is embedded in and reflects and comments on contemporary artistic practices.
Brian ODoherty
ODoherty was born in Ireland in 1928, studied medicine in Dublin and attended Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass., on a research fellowship. In the 1960s he worked as an art critic for the New York Times, as an artist he was among the founders of Conceptual art. In 1967 he published Object and Idea: An Art Critics Journal, 196167 (his collected art criticism), followed in 1974 by American Masters: The Voice and the Myth. ODoherty gained fame in the Germanspeaking world thanks to his book Inside the White Cube: The Ideology of the Gallery Space (1986). Aside from writing on contemporary American art, he has also published works of fiction and taught art criticism and film at Columbia University, New York, until the 1990s. His novel The Deposition of Father McGreevy (1999) was shortlisted for the renowned Booker Prize (2000). Recent publications include the novel The Crossdressers Secret (2014) and A Mental Masquerade. When Brian ODoherty Was a Female Art Critic: Mary Josephsons Collected Writings (2019).
I never see the self as a stable entity, but as a fluid, multivalent series of accommodations to inward and outward pressures, giving birth to different personae. Brian ODoherty