NEW YORK, NY.- The Museum of Modern Art announces Louise Lawler: WHY PICTURES NOW, the first major survey in New York of the artist Louise Lawler (American, b. 1947). Spanning the 40-year creative output of one of the most influential artists working in the fields of image production and institutional critique, the exhibition will be on view from April 30 to July 30, 2017, in The Joan and Preston Robert Tisch Exhibition Gallery, sixth floor, along with one sound work, Birdcalls (1972-81), which will be installed in The Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Sculpture Garden. The exhibition takes its title from one of Lawlers most iconic works, Why Pictures Now (1982), a black-and-white photograph showing a matchbook propped up in an ashtray. Reminiscent of an advertising photograph or a film noir still, it asks the viewer to consider why the work takes the form of a picture, and why the artist is making pictures now. Lawler came of age as part of the Pictures Generation, a loosely knit, highly independent group of artists named for an influential exhibition, Pictures, organized in 1977 by art historian Douglas Crimp at Artists Space in New York. These artists used photography and appropriation-driven strategies to examine the functions and codes of representation. Lawlers signature style was established in the late 1970s and early 1980s, when she began taking pictures of other artists works displayed in collectors homes, museums, storage spaces, and auction houses to question the value, meaning, and use of art. WHY PICTURES NOW is organized by Roxana Marcoci, Senior Curator, with Kelly Sidley, Curatorial Assistant, Department of Photography.
Lawlers work offers a defiant, witty, and sustained feminist analysis of the strategies that inform arts production and reception. In 1971, she was invited to assist several artists for independent curator Willoughby Sharps Pier 18, an exhibition that featured 27 male artists on an abandoned pier on the Hudson River. While walking home after leaving the pier one evening, Lawler began to mimic birdlike sounds in order to ward off any unwanted interactions, chanting Willoughby! Willoughby! This parody evolved into Birdcalls, a seven-minute audio piece in which Lawler squawks, chirps, and twitters the names of famous male artists, from Vito Acconci to Lawrence Weineran astute critique of the name recognition enjoyed by her male contemporaries. Birdcalls thematizes Lawlers strategy of resistance to the authoritative and the patronymic proper name. This work will be played throughout the course of the exhibition, in MoMAs Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Sculpture Garden.
An intriguing aspect of Lawlers practice is her process of continuous re-presentation, reframing, or restaging in the present: she revisits her own work by transferring her images to different formats, from a photograph to a tracing, and to works that she calls adjusted to fit. The tracings are large-format black-and-white line versions of her photographs that eliminate color and detail, functioning instead as ghosts of the originals. The adjusted to fit are images stretched or expanded to fit the location of their display, not only suggesting the idea that pictures can have more than one life, but also underpinning the intentional, relational character of Lawlers farsighted art.
The exhibition consists of a sequence of mural-scale, adjusted to fit images set in dynamic relation to non-linear groupings of photographsof collectors homes, auction houses, and museum installationsdistinctive of Lawlers conceptual exercises. Additionally, a deceptively empty space presents black-and-white tracings of Lawlers photographs that have been printed on vinyl and mounted directly on the wall. A display of the artists ephemera from the 1970s to today highlights the feminist and performative undercurrents of her art. Lawlers long history of artistic collaborations, with Sherrie Levine, Allan McCollum, Andrea Fraser, Christopher dArcangelo, Peter Nadin, and Lawrence Weiner, among others, come full circle in the ephemera on display. Furthermore, on the platform outside the gallery space, two adjusted to fit works are shown together with Cameron Rowlands work New York State Unified Court System. This work, comprised of four oak court benches, was included in Rowland's exhibition 91020000, presented at Artists Space in 2016. Lawler and Rowland share an interest in examining the imbalances of exploitative economies, the use value and exchange value of art, the politics of space, and the interplay of power between human relations and larger institutional structures, including markets, museums, prisons, and governments. In foregrounding her works relationship to the economies of collaboration and exchange, Lawler shifts focus from the individual picture to the broader history of art. Her careful attention to artistic contexts, modes of presentation, and viewers receptions generates witty, affective situations that contribute to institutional transformation.