NEW YORK, NY.- Luhring Augustine is presenting an exhibition of iconic works by Reinhard Mucha, selected from throughout the artists career. The show marks the artists fifth solo exhibition with the gallery, and his first major presentation since his retrospective Der Mucha: An Initial Suspicion at the Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen in Düsseldorf, Germany (2022-2023).
Throughout Muchas artistic production of the past five decades run numerous themes that include: collective identity, memory, nationhood, the psychology of architecture and institutional power, the museum as the locus for the creation of history, and the merging of industrial, historical, and political landscapes. Muchas complex work penetrates several dualities: connectivity and isolation, temporality and permanence, intimate narrative and national history, progress and stasis. For this exhibition, several of Mucha's emblematic vitrine works along with the free-standing sculpture, Baden-Baden / Standard II, will be presented in a site-specific installation devised by the artist, which both acknowledges his own history with the gallerys exhibition space and highlights the rigorous, cohesive nature of his practice.
In an insightful text commissioned by the gallery for the exhibitioncomposed in the form of a letter to the artistWashington DC-based curator Yuri Stone, writes:
Ive always thought of your objects as records of time in and of themselves. Your material palette is distinctly of a time before now. A time of solid wood doors, lacquer, lead paint, and fluorescent tube lights. I sense a preoccupation in your work with the things and systems we inherit: railways, bureaucracies, museum display cases, industrial production lines. You seem to suggest that modernity isnt something we can escape or transcendit is the very architecture in which we live and through which we remember. And yet, you transform that architecturenot by rejecting it, but by exposing it. And in this modernity we grapple with capitalism, war, joy, innovation, regression, and one another. We grapple with the uneasy realization that the very structures built to organize and contain our livesour histories, our labor, our sense of orderalso confine us. What you reveal is not a nostalgia for a lost authenticity, but a deep awareness that memory itself has become infrastructural: archived in vitrines, routed through railways, filed in drawers. The human and the mechanical, the personal and the institutional, the past and the presentthese collapse into one another and often contradict each other. Yuri Stone
Read the full letter
here.