MIAMI, FL.- In October of 2009,
Miami Art Museum will premiere the most comprehensive survey of the work of Argentine artist Guillermo Kuitca ever presented in North America. On view at MAM from October 9, 2009 through January 17, 2010, Guillermo Kuitca: Everything, Paintings and Works on Paper, 1980-2008 will trace the evolution of Kuitcas work through more than 50 canvases and 25 works on paper, spanning 28 years of the artists career.
Guillermo Kuitca: Everything, Paintings and Works on Paper, 1980-2008 is co organized by Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo, New York; the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C.; and Miami Art Museum.
Guillermo Kuitca explores themes of dislocation and the intersection of public and private spaces through works ranging from early paintings of theatrical scenes, to complex abstractions which reference maps and architectural plans. Kuitca was the chosen representative of Argentina at the Venice Biennale in 2007, where he was one of only three artists with work on view in both a national pavilion and in the central international Biennale exhibition. The artists work was previously exhibited at the Center for Fine Arts, which later became the Miami Art Museum, in the 1995 exhibition Burning Beds Guillermo Kuitca: A Survey 1982-1994.
In addition to the artworks within Miami Art Museums on-site gallery space, the Museum will also host Guillermo Kuitca: Everything (else), at Miamis Freedom Tower. MAM is working with the Art Gallery System of Miami Dade College, which owns and operates this nationally designated landmark historic building, to install 32 Seating Plans, 2007 a piece comprised of 32 drawings and two large-scale paintings, Everything, 2004 and The Ring, 2002, each over 20 feet wide. Also on view for the first time will be Der Fliegende Holländer" (Scrim Suite), 2009. Tracing its origins to the stage designs conceived by Kuitca for a 2003 production of Wagners The Flying Dutchman at the Teatro Colón in Buenos Aires, this installation explores the experience and perception of light, space and image through the medium of three silk scrims.
Drawing inspiration from charts, maps and theater seating plans, Kuitcas work challenges boundaries both literally and figuratively, said Terence Riley, MAM Director. MAM is a hemispheric hub for art across the Americas, and this exhibition is particularly relevant to MAM and the Miami community. We are pleased to present our second exhibition of Kuitcas work, and look forward to presenting many more exhibitions of this scale and importance once MAM moves to its new, expanded facility at Museum Park.
Curated by Doug Dreishpoon of the Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Guillermo Kuitca: Everything, Paintings and Works on Paper, 1980-2008 will travel to the Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo, NY; the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis; and the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C following its premiere in Miami. Major funding is provided by the Bruce T. Halle Family Foundation, AXA Art Insurance Corporation, and the Leadership and Honorary Patrons Committee for the exhibition, with additional catalogue support from Colección Patricia Phelps de Cisneros.
Dating to the early and mid-1980s, the earliest works in the exhibition reflect Kuitcas experiences as a theatrical stage director in Argentina, with titles often drawn from plays, literature, and popular music. Works such as El Mar Dulce and Siete Ultima Canciones, both completed in 1986, are reminiscent of stage sets viewed from a distance, with tiny figures acting out mysterious and disturbing dramas. Themes of absence and loss emerged in subsequent works of this period, which depict overturned chairs, sullied beds that appear to be on fire, and a microphone on an empty stage.
Kuitcas works of the late 1980s and early 1990s explore architecture and topography, as well as domestic and communal spaces. The floor plans of public institutions (the Tablada Suite), geographical maps (the artists map paintings on canvases and mattresses), and genealogical charts (the People on Fire series) begin to serve as important references during this period. Though these works imply social interaction and public spaces, the human figure remains notably absent.
Kuitca further explored organizational systems throughout the 1990s and early 2000s. In Neufert Suite, 1998, a series of paintings, and LEncyclopédie, 2002, a series of works on paper, he references an architects handbook and the work of French philosopher Denis Diderot, who attempted to condense the whole of human knowledge into an encyclopedia. In his series of drawings titled Global Order, 2002, Kuitca fuses a map of the world with building plans for domestic spaces, identifying borders and notions of place as the changing products of human invention.
Since the late 1990s, Kuitca has created both large and small-scale works on paper that explore and deconstruct his painted works. Continuing his investigation of mapping, Kuitca based a 2007 series on seating charts from renowned performance spaces such as the Metropolitan Opera House in New York. Kuitca selectively edits information from these charts in an electronic format before printing them. He then further alters their appearance and meaning by subjecting them to different water treatments which alter the printed image. The resulting works are surreal abstractions, whose pictorial elements have migrated across paper. Guillermo Kuitca: Everything, Paintings and Works on Paper, 1980-2008 will explore the relationship between these recent works, which court accident through the use of procedures with random results.
Guillermo Kuitca: Everything, Paintings and Works on Paper, 1980-2008 will include Kuitcas canvas Mozart-Da Ponte VI, 1996, from Miami Art Museums permanent collection, as well as two works included in the 2007 Venice Biennale, Desenlace I, 2006, and Desenlace IV, 2007. The exhibition will also feature Untitled, 1992, a piece comprised of 20 painted mattresses from the collection of Tate Modern.
Guillermo Kuitca
Based in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Guillermo Kuitca (born 1961, Buenos Aires) has garnered international attention since the mid-1980s. In 1985 he represented Argentina in the XVIII São Paulo Biennal. His work was first seen in the United States in a group exhibition at the Americas Society in New York in 1989, New Image Painting: Argentina in the Eighties.
In the 1990s he had solo museum and gallery shows in the Netherlands and the United States, which included a Projects show at the Museum of Modern Art in New York in 1992. Also that year, his installation for Documenta IX of map paintings and a large installation of bed sculptures brought him significant international attention. Since then Kuitca has had solo exhibitions at the Instituto de Arte Moderno (IVAM) in Valencia, Spain (1993) and Burning Beds: Guillermo Kuitca, A Survey 1982-1994, which was organized by the Wexner Center for the Arts, Columbus, Ohio, and the Contemporary Art Foundation, Amsterdam in 1994. In 1999 he exhibited at the Centro Hélio Oiticica and in 2000 at the Foundation Cartier in Paris.
The most recent survey of Kuitcas works, covering the period 1983-2003, was organized by the Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofia, Madrid, and traveled to the Museo de Arte Latino Americano, Buenos Aires (MALBA) in the summer of 2003. Kuitca was the chosen representative of Argentina at the Venice Biennale in 2007.
On October 15, 2009, The Dallas Center for the Performing Arts will unveil the stage curtain designed by Kuitca for the Centers new Margot and Bill Winspear Opera House. This commission will be Kuitcas first design for a stage curtain.