NEW YORK, NY.- Marlborough Gallery presents an exhibition of work by renowned Polish sculptor Magdalena Abakanowicz. This show, her first in New York since 2005, includes work in aluminum, bronze, burlap and plaster, and follows recent solo exhibitions at the Palacio de Cristal, Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía, Madrid and Instituto Valenciano de Arte Moderno, Valencia, both in 2008, and the Fondazione Arnaldo Pomodoro, Milan, in 2009. Several works are on display in the Energy and Process wing at the Tate Modern for the duration of 2010.
Abakanowicz is recognized as one of the most potent and unique voices in contemporary art with a distinct sculptural vocabulary that expresses a philosophical quest.
Abakanowiczs exhibition includes fifteen works from the new cycle Anatomy in which she has arranged single and multiple sculptures of human limbs formed in burlap arms, hands, legs and feet onto wood beams supported by steel armatures. Anatomy 22, 2009 (32 ¾ x 14 ¾ x 10 ¼ in.) depicts three delicate hands with fingers curved in and placed on a wood block. Anatomy 18, 2009 (48 x 27 ½ x 11 ½ in.) includes four legs with knees slightly bent through the top of the thigh that stand firmly on a wood beam. These sculptures are at once beautiful and unsettling, reminders of the fragile nature of the human condition.
Also included are three life-size figures in cast aluminum and eight large figures in plaster and wood, ranging in height from five to almost nine feet. An example of the former is Armament, 2009 (64 ¼ x 32 ½ x 29 ½ in.), wherein a headless figure, body impressed with beams or slats, is seated on a chair, legs dangling above the floor. In addition to this group, a series of four bronze sculptures, entitled Anonim 1(19 x 8 x 11 ¼ in.) through Anomin 4 (19 ½ x 9 x 10 ½ in.), depict human heads on long necks and recall her cycle Anonymous Portraits, 1989-90, made of cotton, resin, sand and wood. The show alsos include three tall sculptures of birds in flight, soaring high on steel poles, that capture a magnificent feeling of lightness and energy, yet they are mutant, with distinct welded seems. As the artist has written, Birds are for me just shapes from which I select a bit of their features
My imagination doesnt reproduce, but produces forms which are not needed in the world of nature, as they dont fulfill functions of creatures alive, growing and dying. (Working Process e Non Solo, Collezione Gori, 2002).
The art of Abakanowicz stands out as a major achievement because of its timeless gestalt, its power to invoke deep feeling, and its unique use of figural form as the embodiment of a visionary philosophy. Robert Hughes in Time magazine referred to its dark vision of primal myth. Both Barbara Rose (Magdalena Abakanowicz, Harry N. Abrams, 1994) and Michael Brenson have written at length on the interpretation of her work. Brenson has said she has one of the most original minds he has encountered in an artist and Rose has written that She is a shaman who receives and transmits messages in a visual language that is more universal than words.
Abakanowicz has had over 150 solo exhibitions in Europe, North and South America, Japan, South Korea, and Australia. She has had major shows at The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, the Jardins du Palais Royal in Paris and the Muzeum Narodowe in Poznan. Among numerous prizes and distinctions Abakanowicz has received seven honorary doctorates from universities in Europe and the United States as well as the Commandeur de lOrdre des Arts et des Lettres from France. She was also awarded the prestigious International Sculpture Centers Lifetime Achievement Award in 2005.
In the past twenty years Abakanowicz has developed a number of site-specific sculpture installations that incorporate multiple figures or elements of increased scaled that suit her particular objectives in those environments. Among these are Negev at the Israel Museum, Jerusalem, 1987; Space of Dragon, Olympic Park, Seoul, South Korea, 1985; Becalmed Beings, Hiroshima City Museum of Contemporary Art, Japan, 1993; Space of Unknown Growth, Europos Parkas, Lithuania, 1997-98; Unrecognized, Citadel Park, Poznan, Poland, 2002; Space of Stone, Grounds for Sculpture, Hamilton, New Jersey, 2003 and, most recently, Agora, a sculptural group comprised of 106 unique cast-iron figures measuring over nine-feet tall that was permanently installed in Chicagos Grant Park in 2006.
Abakanowiczs work can be found in numerable public collections including the Israel Museum, Jerusalem; Ludwig Museum, Cologne; Musée National dArt Moderne, Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris; Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago; The Museum of Modern Art and The Metropolitan Museum
of Art in New York; Nasher Sculpture Center, Dallas; National Gallery of Art, Washington and the Sezon Museum, Tokyo, among others.