NEW YORK, NY.- Marking a major collaboration between two leading U.S. museums,
The Metropolitan Museum of Art and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA) announced the joint acquisition of South African artist William Kentridges major multimedia installation The Refusal of Time (2012).
Among Kentridges most complex and ambitious work to date, the piece represents a key development in the artists recent practice, with the incorporation of major sculptural and kinetic elements in an immersive multi-projection environment.
The Refusal of Time is a joint acquisition by purchase and is having its United States premiere at the Metropolitan Museum from October 22, 2013, through May 11, 2014.
The acquisition of The Refusal of Time signals the Metropolitans strong commitment to the art of today, and we are thrilled to share this work with SFMOMA, says Thomas P. Campbell, Director and CEO of the Metropolitan Museum. Regarding its premiere in New York, he continues, As the steward of 5,000 years of artistic heritage from all corners of the world, the Met offers a unique and global context in which to explore Kentridges remarkable meditation on the history of standards and measures of time.
When SFMOMAs transformative expansion project is complete and the museum reopens to the public in 2016, The Refusal of Time will join an extensive body of works by Kentridge already in or promised to SFMOMAs collection as well as in the renowned Doris and Donald Fisher Collection35 artworks in total, including videos, works on paper, and other major multimedia installations, making San Francisco home to one of the best representations of the artists mature work.
Refusal of Time offers viewers a powerful multisensory experience that builds upon Kentridges history of creating humanistic, politically urgent, and truly extraordinary hybrid work, says SFMOMA Director Neal Benezra, who co-curated a traveling Kentridge retrospective in 2001, one of the first exhibitions to widely introduce the artists work to U.S. audiences. SFMOMA is thrilled to collaborate with the Met on joint stewardship of this important work, which furthers our broader vision to be an international showcase for the most boundary-pushing art of our time.
William Kentridges installations of recent years are particularly notable for their skillful integration of moving image, sound, sculptural elements, and theater to provide the viewer with an experience virtually unparalleled in other recent time-based practice. His work in all mediadrawings, video projections, prints, performancedeftly combines visually seductive imagery with probing explorations of the interwoven histories of science, colonialism, and globalization, as well as the ephemeral nature of both personal and cultural memory.
The Refusal of Time
It is rare that the intelligence of an artists intellectual vision is matched so perfectly by such a profoundly moving and remarkable manifestation, said Sheena Wagstaff, the Leonard A. Lauder Chairman of the Metropolitan Museums Department of Modern and Contemporary Art. Kentridges Refusal of Timethe first major work of contemporary art to be acquired here this yearis truly a Gesamtkunstwerk, an all-embracing and transformative work of art. We are happy to collaborate on this acquisition with SFMOMA, and to bring it to public view in New York at a moment when an inspiring range of Kentridges work is being shown.
Commissioned originally for Documenta 13 in Kassel, Germany, The Refusal of Time (2012) comprises five separate video channels that are projected around the room and a layered soundscape by the renowned South African composer Philip Miller, which emits from various megaphones, each with a different soundtrack. Central to the work is a large kinetic sculpturethe breathing machine or elephantan organ-like automaton with a pumping bellows. For the video projections, Kentridge collaborated with choreographers, filmmakers, and stage designers to create animations and live-action sequences, including the final shadow procession that ends the 30-minute work.
Kentridges recent interest in the nature of time was given focus through the work of Harvard-based historian of science Peter Galison, who studied Albert Einsteins experiments with the measurement of time through telegraphs and the synchronization of clocks at national railway stations. In Galisons view, Einsteins work converged with that of Henri Poincaré, the late-19th-century French mathematician and president of the Bureau des Longitudes, who developed global time zone maps at the dawn of the 20th century. Both scientists were forced to face the radical idea that, in a newly industrialized and interconnected world, time was relative and not absolute. Throughout the installation, Kentridge refers to a number of additional historical accounts in order to evoke multiple theories of timea strategy that also poetically embodies a refusal of certainty and a resistance to an imposition of an imperialistic sense of order.
The elephant was inspired by plans from the 1870s for copper pneumatic tubes under the streets of Paris that would pump air to calibrate the citys clocks. This reminded Kentridge of a passage from Charles Dickenss Hard Times (1854), wherein the author describes factory machines as moving monotonously up and down, like the head of an elephant in a state of melancholy madnessa metaphor for the often convulsive developments that accompany science and industry in the modern era and a reminder of the vain impulse to attempt control of ones own time.
In its masterful execution, The Refusal of Time not only synthesizes a number of visual and filmic themes, and performance-based strategies that have been at the heart of Kentridges oeuvre over the past decades, but also touches on the key styles of his vibrant moving-image workincluding stop-motion animation of charcoal drawings, paper cutout figures, original live-action film, and techniques of reversing image and speed.
Also on View at the Metropolitan Museum
In Praise of Shadows: William Kentridge in the Collection
The complementary installation, In Praise of Shadows: William Kentridge in the Collection presents a selection of works on paper by Kentridge from The Metropolitan Museum of Arts collection. These works were acquired over the past twelve years by two departments: Drawings and Prints and Modern and Contemporary Art.
As Kentridge has often argued, his primary medium is always drawing; and the larger-scale, multimedia work for which he is now so renowned finds its root in the artists experiments with charcoal, chalk, or graphite. The works in the installation demonstrate the wide range of intellectual references that are part of the artists oeuvre, notably Leviathan (Arc Shadow Procession) (2000) in which silhouettes are pasted on three pages from Thomas Hobbess famous 1651 treatise on government and Man with Megaphone (1998), featuring an object that has regularly appeared in Kentridges work since 1990. The megaphone, which appears in The Refusal of Time, represents the desire to project ideas and is a link for the artist to the manifestos and agitprop of the 20th-century avant-garde.
William Kentridge was born in Johannesburg, South Africa, in 1955, where he still lives and works. After attending a school for drama, he was active throughout the 1970s and 1980s in theater and television production. By the 1990scoinciding with the abolishment of apartheid in South AfricaKentridges live theater work as well as the stop-motion, animated films he made from his own charcoal drawings found an increasingly international audience. He has had recent major exhibitions at the Philadelphia Museum of Art (2008) and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (2009) and participated in the Venice Biennale (2005), Prospect.1 New Orleans and the Sydney Biennial (both 2008), as well as Documenta (1997 and 2002). His works for opera and theater, often made in collaboration with Handspring Puppet Company, have appeared at the Festival dAvignon (1995 and 1996), the Brooklyn Academy of Museum (2007), the Market Theatre, Johannesburg (2011), and the Teatro di Roma (2012), among many other venues.