MUNICH.- The resurgent interest in contemporary painting in recent years has coincided with an explosion of new digital media and technologies. Contrary to canonical accounts premised on medium-specificity, paintings most advanced positions since the 1960s have developed in productive friction with contemporaneous forms of mass media and culture. From the rise of television and computers to the Internet revolution, painting has assimilated precisely those cultural and technological developments that were held responsible for its presumed death. Moving far beyond its technical definition as oil on canvas, painting during the information age has consistently offered a site for negotiating the challenges of a mediated life-world.
Painting 2.0: Expression in the Information Age will be the first exhibition to tell the story of paintings adaptation, absorption and transformation of information technologies in Western Europe and the United States since the 1960s. Its historical starting point in Pop Art and Nouveau Réalismes programmatic appropriation and re-contextualization of commercial imagery precedes the advent of digitalization and the Internet by some thirty years. Paintings capacity to absorb and transform other media became explicit at the same moment as its legitimacy was fundamentally challenged by cultural forms of mediation which Guy Debord theorizes in his influential critique as The Society of the Spectacle (1967).
A central tactic in paintings encounter with spectacle is its mobilization of painterly expression. Painting 2.0 will demonstrate that since the 1960s the expressive gesture has served as a means of reintegrating the virtual world of the information age into the material domain of the human body indicating the charged border between the human and the technological, as well as the analog and the digital. Painting 2.0 will trace the multi-faceted history of painting and spectacle right up to the ubiquitous digital formats that characterize our present day, ranging from the interactive Web 2.0, its social media, to data clouds.
Painting 2.0 will occupy the entirety of the Museum Brandhorst, with the exception of the upper floor gallery custom-built for Cy Twomblys Lepanto-cycle. It is the largest and most ambitious temporary exhibition to be organized by the museum since it opened in 2009. Three inter-related sections, each occupying a floor of the museum, will trace three important strands in the development of painting since 1960.
Gesture and Spectacle surveys the ways in which gestural techniques were mobilized to combat or humanize spectacle. It presents works in which the painterly mark is used as means to assault, to undermine spectacular forms of commercial media, ranging from Niki de Saint Phalles Shooting Pictures or the torn billboard-advertisements of the Affichistes Mimmo Rotella, Jaques Villeglé, and Raymond Hains to painterly strategies that mimic in critical ways the logic of the spectacle, such as Keith Harings Subway Drawings, Albert Oehlens computer-paintings or Monika Baers abstractions with banknotes and coins.
Eccentric Figuration brings together various aesthetic manifestations of the bodily in painting under the influence of media and spectacle. There is a strong registration of corporeality and a play with mimesis among this group of artists whose forms range from the literally figurative to a visceral mode of abstractly figuring the bodily in and through the material of paint. The prosthetic bodies in Maria Lassnigs and Lee Lozanos work, the eccentric mark-making of Cy Twombly and Amy Sillman, the cartoonish exaggerations of William L. Copley and Nicole Eisenman, the anti-heroic bodies in Philip Guston and Kai Althoffs work they all testify to the complex entanglement of body, media images, and new technologies since the mid-20th century.
Social Networks centers on those ways in which painting represents a network society, both through the mobilization of images on canvas and by representing the artists life-worlds. Andy Warhols Factory, the so-called Capitalist Realism of Sigmar Polke, Gerhard Richter, Konrad Lueg and Manfred Kuttner, and, the feminist artists of New Yorks A.I.R. Gallery, will be exhibited alongside contemporary artists sometimes referred to as network painting such as Seth Price or R.H. Quaytman.
Painting 2.0 brings together more than 200 works by some 100 artists:
Kai Althoff, Ei Arakawa/Shimon Minamikawa, Monika Baer, Nairy Baghramian, Georg Baselitz, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Lynda Benglis, Sadie Benning, Judith Bernstein, Joseph Beuys, Ashley Bickerton, Cosima von Bonin, Kerstin Brätsch/KAYA, Günter Brus, Daniel Buren, Merlin Carpenter, Leidy Churchman, William Copley, René Daniëls, Guy Debord/Asger Jorn, Carroll Dunham, Mary Beth Edelson, Thomas Eggerer, Michaela Eichwald, Nicole Eisenman, Jana Euler, Louise Fishman, Isa Genzken, Mary Grigoriadis, Philip Guston, Wade Guyton, Raymond Hains, Harmony Hammond, David Hammons, Keith Haring, Rachel Harrison, Mary Heilmann, Eva Hesse, Charline von Heyl, Jacqueline Humphries, Jörg Immendorff, Jasper Johns, Joan Jonas, Mike Kelley, Martin Kippenberger, Yves Klein, Jutta Koether, Michael Krebber, Manfred Kuttner, Maria Lassnig, Sherrie Levine, Glenn Ligon, Lee Lozano, Konrad Lueg, Michel Majerus, Piero Manzoni, Kerry James Marshall, John Miller, Joan Mitchell, Ree Morton, Ulrike Müller, Matt Mullican, Elisabeth Murray, Cady Noland, Hilka Nordhausen, Albert Oehlen, Steven Parrino, Ed Paschke, Howardena Pindell, Sigmar Polke, Seth Price, Stephen Prina, R.H. Quaytman, Robert Rauschenberg, David Reed, Gerhard Richter, Mimmo Rotella, Niki de Saint Phalle, Mario Schifano, Amy Sillman, Sylvia Sleigh, Josh Smith, Joan Snyder, Reena Spaulings, Nancy Spero, Frank Stella, Walter Swennen, Paul Thek, Rosemarie Trockel, Cy Twombly, Jacques de la Villeglé, Kelley Walker, Andy Warhol, Sue Williams, Karl Wirsum, Martin Wong, Christopher Wool, Heimo Zobernig, i.a.
Painting 2.0: Expression in the Information Age will be accompanied by a comprehensive and richly illustrated catalogue 320 pages with 350 full color illustrations including substantial historical essays by the curators Achim Hochdörfer, David Joselit, and Manuela Ammer addressing the three sections of the exhibition as well as shorter statements by influential thinkers on paintings recent developments including Lynne Cooke, Isabelle Graw, John Kelsey, Tonio Kröner, Wolfram Pichler and Kerstin Stakemeier.