LOS ANGELES, CA.- Nine months after Los Angeles newest contemporary art museum opened to overwhelming crowds,
The Broads first special exhibition debuted in June with a comprehensive survey of the work of artist Cindy Sherman. Cindy Sherman: Imitation of Life is the first major museum show of Shermans work in Los Angeles in nearly 20 years, and the exhibition fills The Broads first-floor galleries with close to 120 works drawn primarily from the Broad collection.
Organized by guest curator Philipp Kaiser, and taking cues from Los Angeles role as the mecca of the film industry, the special exhibition foregrounds the artists engagement with 20th century popular film and celebrity. The exhibition, which runs June 11 through Oct. 2, 2016, features an expansive representation of Shermans photographs from throughout her influential career of more than four decades, as well as Office Killer, the 1997 feature film directed by the artist. Her widely known film stills series, as well as the less known rear projection series, both inspired by cinema of the 1950s and 1960s, play a central conceptual role in the show, and the show includes many works never before exhibited in Los Angeles.
Cindy Shermans work has been a touchstone for the Broad collection since Eli and Edye Broad first encountered it in 1982, and Cindy is the only artist in the collection whose work weve acquired so deeply and regularly, for more than 30 years, said Joanne Heyler, founding director of The Broad. There are 125 Cindy Sherman photographs in the Broad collection, the largest holding of her work in the world, and inaugurating our special exhibitions with an artist whose work sparked the Broads deep commitment to contemporary art could not be more appropriate for us. Cindy Sherman: Imitation of Life offers a fresh curatorial take on her work in Los Angeles, one of the worlds crucibles of modern image making, focusing on Shermans unique examination of filmic stereotypes and of celebrity, starting with the earliest film stills to works she created just last year.
Most well-known for photographs that feature the artist as her own model playing out media-influenced female stereotypes in a range of personas, environments and guises, Sherman shoots alone in her studio, serving as director, photographer, make-up artist, hairstylist and subject. Her decades-long performative practice has produced many of contemporary arts most iconic and influential images. In her work, Sherman proposes powerful questions about identity, representation and the role of images in contemporary culture. From screen siren and pin-up to socialite and businesswoman, the roles Sherman depicts through her monumental body of work provocatively engage with contemporary lifes mediated personas and stereotypes, drawing not only from art history but also from the histories of advertising, cinema and media.
Sherman reveals and dismantles these stereotypes and the mechanics of their production by creating series after series of photographs that dually evade characterization and focus on particular image-making procedures.
Guest curator Philipp Kaiser is assembling a comprehensive survey of Shermans entire career, drawing works primarily from the Broad collection with key loans from other major institutions. Kaiser is an independent curator, writer and teacher who previously served as the director of the Museum Ludwig, Cologne and has held curatorial positions at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles and the Museum for Contemporary Art, Basel. He has organized large-scale exhibitions on art of the 1980s, Land Art, California Conceptualism and many individual presentations of artists work including Jack Goldstein, Bruce Nauman and Louise Lawler, among others.
Surprisingly, there hasnt been a major museum exhibition of Cindy Shermans work in Los Angeles in nearly two decades, and much of her work is influenced by and connected to the world of Hollywood, said Kaiser. From her film stills to her rear projections and her films, her massive body of work comments on and speaks to the limitless stream of visual material available to us today via cinema, television, advertising, media, the Internet and art itself. Cindy helped to craft the title of the exhibition, Imitation of Life, which is a reference to the Douglas Sirks 1959 film adaptation of Fannie Hursts novel that deals with intensely emotional struggles with identity.
The exhibition highlights Shermans major photographic series, including the iconic untitled film stills (197780), the centerfolds (1981), the fairy tales (1985), the history portraits (1989 90), the sex pictures (1992) and her clown pictures (200304), as well as more recent works.
She is one of the most important artists of our time, with a body of work that exemplifies the Pictures Generationartists whose work came to fruition in the age of the proliferation of mass media imagery in the 80s, which is relevant to todays image-saturated world, said Kaiser.