NEW YORK, NY.- The New Museum presents Rosemarie Trockel: A Cosmos. Organized by Rosemarie Trockel and Lynne Cooke for the Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía, this exhibitionencompassing all three main gallery floors of the Museumpresents a world shaped by Trockels ideas and affinities. The exhibition conjures an imaginary universe in which Trockels own artwork shares space with objects and artifacts, spanning different eras and cultures, that map her artistic interests.
Rosemarie Trockel: A Cosmos is on view at the New Museum from October 24, 2012January 20, 2013. The Museums presentation of the exhibition has been curated by Lynne Cooke, former Deputy Director and Chief Curator, Museo Centro de Arte Reina Sofía, in collaboration with Rosemarie Trockel. The New Museums presentation has been organized in conjunction with the artist and curator by Massimiliano Gioni, Associate Director and Director of Exhibitions, and Jenny Moore, Associate Curator.
Lisa Phillips, Toby Devan Lewis Director, New Museum, said, Rosemarie Trockel is one of the leading artists of her generation and most respected German artists of the past forty years. It is an extraordinary honor for the New Museum to present A Cosmos, which is the most comprehensive survey of her work in the US to date, and the most significant museum presentation in New York since a show of her video work at Dia Art Foundation more than a decade ago. With this new exhibition, we are able to offer the general public a rare view into the mind of one of our most important artists, with a presentation that is fresh in its totality.
Since the early 1970s, Rosemarie Trockel has produced an impressive body of work that includes drawing, collage, installation, knit paintings, ceramics, videos, furniture, clothing, and books. She brings together a range of associations and references from art history, philosophy, theology, and the natural sciences. For A Cosmos, Trockel places her work in the company of others whom she regards as kindred spirits. Installations created for the New Museum illuminate the intellectual and formal connections between her practice and a range of historical figures including self-taught artists James Castle and Morton Bartlett, and the botanist/mathematician José Celestino Mutis. Objects whose impetus was primarily aesthetic are juxtaposed with pieces that more conventionally belong to the realm of science. Trockels roughhewn glazed ceramics from the past several years are displayed along with Leopold and Rudolph Blaschkas delicate glass models of sea creatures created in the nineteenth century. A selection of new work by Trockel can be examined in conjunction with watercolors by the seventeenth-century artist Maria Sybilla Merian, whose impeccably precise yet beautiful renderings of flora and fauna proved invaluable to scientific study.
Trockels well-known disregard for the conventional hierarchies in the visual arts, together with her longstanding appreciation of media and materials once categorized as crafts or vernacular art forms, is demonstrated throughout the exhibition. She has adopted a fluid and radical approach to gender, combining activities typically considered feminine in terms of production with aggressive mechanical and industrial forms. This is emphasized through the inclusion of Judith Scotts obsessively wrapped yarn sculptures alongside Ruth Franckens plastic and metal assemblages from the 1970s. In addition, Trockels celebrated knit paintings are integrated into the exhibition, along with new works made of ceramic.
Rosemarie Trockel was born in 1952 in Schwerte, Germany. She studied at the Kölner Werkschulen in Cologne, Germany. Since 1998, she has been a professor at the Staatliche Kunstakademie Düsseldorf. She lives and works in Cologne. She has been the subject of numerous solo exhibitions at venues including: the Moderna Museet, Stockholm; Dia Center for the Arts, New York; Whitechapel Gallery, London; Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris; and the Kunsthalle Zürich, Switzerland. In 2004, she received the Wolfgang Hahn Prize, resulting in the one-woman exhibition Post-Menopause which premiered at the Museum Ludwig in Cologne before traveling to the Museo Nazionale Delle Arti Del XXI Secolo in Rome