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Wednesday, June 10, 2026 |
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| Urs Fischer transforms Gagosian Athens with new Los Angeles-inspired landscape paintings |
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Urs Fischer, Quadruple Elvis, 2026. Gesso, latex, acrylic paint, alcohol ink, and modeling paste on canvas, 66 x 110 inches (167.6 x 279.4 cm) © Urs Fischer. Courtesy of the artist and Gagosian.
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ATHENS.- Gagosian announces Eugène Atget, an exhibition of new paintings by Urs Fischer. This is the artists first solo presentation at the gallery in Athens.
Through an enormous diversity of materials and techniques, Fischer explores themes of perception and representation by reimagining familiar images and objects. Employing various technologies to manipulate his sources, which include historical motifs, he unites the real and the imagined. In Eugène Atget, the artist transforms the intimate neoclassical interior of 22 Anapiron Polemou Street with a selection of metropolitan landscapes that represent the experience of speeding through a contemporary environment saturated with figures and faces, graphics and text. Combining silkscreening, hand-painting, and stenciling, Fischer applies a collage aestheticinformed by the work of artists from Robert Rauschenberg to Cady Nolandto his own observations of his adopted home of Los Angeles. Layering original photographs over and under found and manipulated imagery, he blends figuration with abstraction to conjure the citys indiscriminate sensory overload.
The exhibitions title cites the influential French photographer, who set out to record the fast-disappearing streetscape of Old Paris at the turn of the century in conspicuously documentary style. Focusing on architecture that predated the French Revolution, Atget used his camera to generate a multipartite historical archive as opposed to a succession of isolated and aestheticized tableaux. In his 1931 essay A Short History of Photography, Walter Benjamin pinpoints this projects enduring importance, characterizing Atget as a pioneer of the fragment who was responsible for liberating the photographic medium from the classical aura of its nineteenth-century form. By training his eye on LAs endless film strip of places that are not made to be looked at, Fischer brings a comparable sensibility to bear on a beautifully chaotic palimpsest of images, signs, and textures.
The large-scale works on display often make use of a panoramic perspective; some have also been installed to resonate with views of local streets and parkland visible through the gallerys picture windows. Combining borrowings from print and digital advertising with original smartphone shots of highways, cars, buildings, and people, Fischers new paintings constitute a fresh set of part-improvised visual and thematic mash-ups that pick up from where Atgets foundational work of urban biography leaves off. And as gallerist Jeffrey Deitch has observed, Artists, writers, and filmmakers who are not native to Los Angeles often create the sharpest portrayal of the city. As Urs Fischer looks out the window of a moving car, he is capturing and then transforming into painting what may be the most resonant visual record of Los Angeles today.
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