Canadian artist Rodney Graham opens a new solo show at Museum Voorlinden
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Canadian artist Rodney Graham opens a new solo show at Museum Voorlinden
The Gifted Amateur, Nov. 10th, 1962, 2007. Private Collection. Courtesy Hauser & Wirth. Unfinished Inverted Drip Painting #1, 2007. Rennie Collection, Vancouver. Rotating Stand (Red, Blue, Yellow, Green, Orange), 2015. Courtesy the artist and Hauser & Wirth.



WASSENAAR.- From 1 July, Museum Voorlinden presents a new solo show titled ‘That’s not me’ by Canadian artist Rodney Graham; one of the most consistent, innovative and influential artists of the past 40 years. This is Graham’s first major exhibition in the Netherlands of his recent work. With a sense of humour and wit, he constantly questions his own identity and asks himself: what does it mean to be an artist today?

‘That’s not me’ invites the visitor to step into Rodney Graham’s universe. The artist captures himself in various roles and disguises, such as an amateur artist, light house keeper, sous-chef, musician and antiquarian. Graham opts for fictional archetypes, often based on old paintings and films, or purely on simple observations of daily life in his hometown of Vancouver. These transformations into characters refer to the artist’s fantasy of living another life, had circumstances been different. Graham is a master of many disciplines, creating an oeuvre with media such as photography, music, film, installations and painting.

This show focuses on Graham’s work from the past decade, in which the artist started concentrating on presenting his work in monumental light boxes. With influences as diverse as Marcel Duchamp, Sigmund Freud, Alfred Hitchcock, the Brothers Grimm, Black Sabbath and Kurt Cobain, he creates works brimming with references to art history, films and literature. With one foot in art history and the other in pop culture, Graham explores his own identity. Despite the many layers and complexity of his art, Graham’s sharp humour and wit keep the works enticing for the viewer.

Not only is the museum showing dozens of monumental light boxes – framed, backlit colour photos – but the exhibition also features several props that Graham created for his staged photographs and the study of his work. The exhibition also addresses Graham’s passion for film and his work as a musician.

The artist and musician Rodney Graham (1949) lives and works in Vancouver, Canada. Graham is associated with the Vancouver School of post-conceptual photography, which emerged in the 1980s and with which artists such as Jeff Wall and Stan Douglas have also been associated. In 1997, he represented Canada at the 47th Venice Biennale. Graham’s work features in significant museum collections such as Tate Modern in London, the MoMA in New York and the Centre Pompidou in Paris, and is exhibited internationally. The Rodney Graham Band recently released their latest album, Gondoliers.

For this exhibition, Museum Voorlinden collaborated closely with the artist and the Baltic Centre for Contemporary Art in Newcastle. Part of the exhibition will subsequently go on display at the Irish Museum of Modern Art (IMMA) in Dublin.










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