LONDON.- Parasol unit foundation for contemporary art presents Robert Therrien: Works 1975 1995 , the first major solo exhibition in Europe of the artists works from this 20-year period. The exhibition of 43 works includes sculptures, reliefs and works on paper executed in two and three dimensions and various media. The show marks a significant contribution to art history at a crucial period within the artists oeuvre, and is especially important as a number of these early works are held in private collections and have not been seen in public for many years.
Robert Therriens earlier works interact with some of the vital art movements of the late twentieth century, including Minimalism, Pop Art and Conceptualism. Taking his inspiration from everyday things a water pitcher, a hat, a snowman, a cloud, for example he simplifies their form and manipulates the scale of his then idealised motifs, which recur in various forms in his immaculately, resolved works. Understanding that the theme of a simple snowman motif is change snow melts and eventually reforms as snow offers insights into his other works, all of which are equally immediate and confounding. Therriens use of the familiar and domestic creates a tangible narrative of childhood memories within his early oeuvre and has provided the vocabulary that has shaped the renowned and immersive sculptures of his later work.
For this exhibition at Parasol unit, the ground floor gallery shows the artists works from the 1990s. It includes No title (black D utch Doors) , 1993, a sculpture formed of two identical rectangular shapes stacked one above the other, mounted to the wall and extending out from it at different angles. Although passage through them is obstructed by the gallery wall, they have a quiet welcoming openness and relate to the open, pointed portal of the artists purple arch sculpture on the opposite wall. Therrien also pays homage to the humble pitcher in his simple, modestly-sized rendering of No title (p itcher with yellow spout), 1990, while giving it a commanding presence in the over-sized, wall-mounted sculpture of the same motif with a black spout.
In the upper gallery, among Therriens works from the 1980s, are the simple silhouettes of a red chapel and a tin-on-bronze snowman, as well as an aubergine coloured cloud with faucets. The cloud, created from three rounded shapes, suggests a state of flux, with the taps evoking some imminent precipitation and its inevitable dissolution. This transformation of something of an impermanent nature into a simple solid object suggests the precariousness of reality and poignancy of constant change.
Robert Therrien, born 1947 in Chicago, Illinois, currently lives and works in Los Angeles, California. His work has been the subject of numerous solo and group exhibitions. Since 2008, several of his works from the 2000s have been exhibited in the United Kingdom as part of the ARTIST ROOMS project, a collaboration between the National Galleries of Scotland and Tate.
Therriens works have been exhibited at, and is in the collections of, The Contemporary Arts Center, Ohio; Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art, Kansas City; Los Angeles County Museum of Art, California; SITE Santa Fe, New Mexico; Contemporary Art Museum, Houston; Museo de Arte Contemporáneo de Monterrey, Mexico; Inverleith House, Royal Botanic Gardens, Edinburgh; Public Art Fund, New York; Museum of Contemporary Art, San Diego; Kupferstichkabinet, Kunstmuseum Basel, Switzerland; The Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, Edinburgh; Milwaukee Art Museum, Wisconsin; De Pont Museum of Contemporary Art, The Netherlands; Tate Liverpool, UK; The Metropolitan Arts Centre, Belfast; Paxton House, BerwickuponTweed, UK; The Contemporary Austin, Texas; The Exchange, Penzance, UK; and Denver Art Museum, Colorado. Future exhibitions include: No Place Like Home , The Israel Museum, Tel Aviv, Israel; and Robert Therrien: Rooms and Other Objects, Gagosian Gallery, Chelsea, New York.