NEW YORK, NY.- David Zwirner presents The House Without the Door at the gallerys 525 and 533 West 19th Street spaces. The exhibition includes works by Adel Abdessemed, Eija-Liisa Ahtila, David Altmejd, Francis Alÿs, Mamma Andersson, Louise Bourgeois, Michael Brown, Philip-Lorca diCorcia, Maureen Gallace, Isa Genzken, Robert Gober, Mona Hatoum, Toba Khedoori, Charles LeDray, Thomas Ruff, Gregor Schneider, Luc Tuymans, Jeff Wall, and Rachel Whiteread. The exhibition is on display from July 7 and runs until August 5, 2011.
Finding inspiration in Emily Dickinsons poem Doom is the House without the Door, this exhibition considers the idea of the home as a charged psychological space. Frequently identified with her familys home, where she produced much of her work, Dickinson has been described as an eccentric recluse, wedded to her interiority. Feminist scholar Diana Fuss has argued that for Dickinson interiority was a complicated conceptual problem, continually posited and reexamined in a body of writing that relies heavily on spatial metaphors to advance its recurrent themes.1 Similarly, the works in The House Without the Door are characterized by their ability to explore myriad issues related to interiority and domesticitysuch as agoraphobia, self-imprisonment, domestic abuse, and memorythrough understated yet compelling gestures.
In many of the works on view, the home is a site that produces mania, anxiety, and desperation. Among them, Gregor Schneiders Totes Haus ur, Rheydt (2000)translated from the German as Dead Housedocuments the artists former family home in Rheydt, Germany, where in 1985 he began compulsively remaking its interior into a veritable labyrinth by building rooms within rooms, walls in front of other walls, and installing lighting fixtures and ventilators to artificially simulate sunlight and the outside air. When describing the work, Schneider has stated, I dream about taking the whole house away with me and building it somewhere else. My father and mother would then live in it, older relatives would lie dead in the cellar, my brothers would live upstairs.
I am somewhere in there, too, constantly rebuilding everything.2 Louise Bourgeoiss Maison (1986) takes the schematic form of a house with six levels upon which organic forms made of plaster rest. Here, as with her other deeply symbolic work, the artist explores autobiographical themes such as her childhood and later agoraphobia. As historian Beatriz Colomina suggests, the scene [Bourgeois] constructs
is that of homesickness, in the double sense of mourning for a lost home and the sickness of the home itself.3 Jeff Walls Rear, 304 E. 25th Ave., May 20, 1997, 1.14 & 1.17 (1997) depicts a drug addict standing outside the back door of a dilapidated house, and a small photo insert on the right side of the image shows a close-up of a hole in the back door through which money is being exchanged for dope. In this work, the door denies access to refuge and instead permits transgression; the home itself is a vessel for the depraved.
Time and space can take on an uncanny quality within the home, and an ordinary room may elicit strong physical and psychological experiences for those who enter. Francis Alÿss Déjà vu (1994), for example, consists of two near-identical paintings of a bedroom hung in separate rooms. Upon encountering the second of the pair, an unsettling sense of temporal disorientation lingers for the viewer.
A selection of Polaroids depicting domestic scenes by Philip-Lorca diCorcia transgress the casualness and immediacy of the medium by capturing a pervasive mood of loneliness, melancholy, and isolation. Similarly, while the photographs from Thomas Ruffs series Interieurs (1979-1983) appear to be objective visual records of the artists apartment and family home, Ruffs technique strips these intensely personal places of their familiarity. As a sculptural extension of her seminal video work The House (2002), Eija-Liisa Ahtilas The Clear House (2004) employs the vernacular of architectural models to represent psychological potentialities that take on a highly individuated presence [in which] viewers
look on the structures as possible manifestations of human psychologies.4 Maureen Gallaces seemingly idyllic paintings of houses in rural New England signify, according to critic Bruce Hainley, the psychic comfort and turmoil of house and home. The artist frequently leaves the houses she depicts devoid of windows and doors; for Gallace, interiors remain
unseen, unseeable.
Other works in the exhibition pose questions of memory, presence, and absence. Luc Tuymanss sparsely colored, figurative works speak in a quiet, restrained, and at times haunting voice, and typically refer to horrific and violent events that are shrouded in ordinary, everyday imagery. The obscured remains of a brutal act are alluded to in Attic (1995), and a quotidian dinner table is infused with political undertones in Plates (2011). In Mamma Anderssons Sovrum/Bedroom (2007), a claustrophobic, empty interior seems innocent at first glance. An overturned chair, however, alludes to a possible disturbance of some kind. The home simultaneously becomes a place of refuge, security, isolation, and violence. Toba Khedooris large-scale work on paper Untitled (White Fireplace) (2005) divorces its subjecta symbol of warmth and domestic tranquilityfrom the markers of place and time. Here, the artists motif becomes a disquieting representation of dislocation and failure. Larger notions of domicile security are undermined in the sculptural work of Isa Genzken, where a concrete fragment recalls bombed out buildings and traumatic moments in German history.
Many of the artists in the exhibition imbue everyday objects with a psychological weight that seems to belie their formal simplicity. Mona Hatoums Home (1999), for example, is comprised of a large kitchen table upon which various metal cooking utensils are attached to a network of wires, literally charging the conductive objects with a electrical current. According to the artist, I called it Home because I see it as a work that shatters notions of the wholesomeness of the home environment, the household, and the domain where the feminine resides. Having always had an ambiguous relationship with notions of home, family, and the nurturing that is expected out of this situation, I often like to introduce a physical or psychological disturbance to contradict those expectations.6 Rachel Whiteread creates charged, almost ephemeral negative versions of cast objects that bear the marks of their previous use while becoming sculptural objects in their own right. Using furniture as a metaphor for human beings, her work suggests a physical and psychological presence that simultaneously insists upon the notion of absence. In Untitled (Black Bed) (1991) and Felt Floor (1997), a bed is entombed in its own materiality while the felt floor is stripped of its characteristic stability. Michael Browns housepainters brush, eerily left behind, points to the erasure of the history of a house and its inhabitants one coat of paint at a time.
Similarly, Robert Gobers Untitled (1984-88) infuses a mundane household object (in this case, a kitchen sink) with an unsettling sense of unfamiliarity by stripping it of its ordinary functions. This work exemplifies the artists interest in taking the forms of a more minimal vocabulary and infusing them with an emotional, biographical, and hallucinatory quality.7 Carved out of human bone and encased in a glass bell jar, the freighted materials that make up Charles LeDrays Bone Rocker (1995), writes curator Russell Ferguson, inevitably introduce the theme of mortality [as it] inescapably suggests the sleep of death that lies just beyond the comfort of the rocking chair.8 David Altmejds Untitled (2011) features a rough form of an anthropomorphic structure made out of plaster, wood, and burlap that appears to have been violently formed by the artists hands, obliterating distinctions between interior and exterior. The organic structure of the work indicates a tension-laden relationship between its materials and the body of the artist.
The exhibition ends with Adel Abdessemeds Exit (2007). Following the artists emigration from his native Algeria to France, the work presents a small yellow neon sign that reads Exil which, translated from the French, means exile. The work points to the political necessity of exile, the trauma of displacement, and the tenuous notion of home.