NEW YORK, N.Y.- The
Paula Cooper Gallery presents an exhibition of works by John Chamberlain, spanning four decades of this acclaimed artists career. The exhibition opened on March 1 and remain on view through April 2, 2011. With works ranging from 1962 through 1990, the exhibition presents a selection of free-standing pieces and wall sculptures made in Chamberlains iconic idiom of crushed metal from car bodies and other detritus of modern industrial society. Since the late 1950s, Chamberlains practice has included the crumpling, welding and at times painting or spraying of discarded car parts, which he twists and bends to form dynamic, powerful assemblages. Notable for their everyday, industrial nature and their varying degrees of formal resilience and pliability, Chamberlains materials have also included Plexiglas (melted), urethane foam (carved, twisted and tied) and industrial-weight aluminum foil (compressed and wadded). With their emphasis on spontaneous fit over pre-organized composition and their blend of boldness and lyricism, Chamberlains works have often been described as a three-dimensional expression of Abstract Expressionist painting. Along with Mark di Suvero, he represents a defining moment of American sculpture when the raw power and cultural relevance of industrial and vernacular materials came to surpass previous notions of sculptural beauty.
John Chamberlain was born in Rochester, Indiana, in 1927, and studied at the Art Institute of Chicago and Black Mountain College, NC. He moved to New York in the heyday of Abstract Expressionism and credits his early influences to the paintings of de Kooning and Kline and the sculpture of David Smith. In addition to sculpture, Chamberlain has also produced paintings, drawings, prints and video. The Guggenheim Museum, New York, presented Chamberlains first retrospective in 1971, and it was followed by over 100 one-person exhibitions, most notably at the Kunsthalle Bern and Van Abbemuseum Eindhoven (1979); the Dia Art Foundation (1983); the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles (1986); the Staatlich Kunsthalle Baden-Baden (1991) and the Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam (1996). His work is permanently on view at the Chinati Foundation in Marfa (TX) and at Dia:Beacon (NY).