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Ruscha's
images are mementos of the human race taken back with them by
visitors from another planet, as unsettling as his typewriter
lying in a dusty road, the airless cathedral of his Texas filling
station, the lettered symbols of his commercial signs that say
everything and tell us nothing - J.G.Ballard, July 1999
Ed
Ruscha's unique and prescient vision of the modern world, seen
from the vantage point of his home in California, is on view at
the Anthony d'Offay Gallery from 5 May to 3 June.
The
subject, mountains and highways, of this new series of paintings
and works on paper is the conjunction of urban and rural, the
impact of man upon nature, characteristic of the planet in our
time. Both subjects, as well as the use of words with which they
are juxtaposed, are long-standing preoccupations in Ruscha's work.
They have roots in California, but also a universality which is
simultaneously frightening and inevitable, cosy and familiar,
chilling and exciting. Exactitude of execution and realistic imagery
are the precision tools the artist offers the traveller on this
journey; they are the embarkation point or perhaps the return
ticket for a revelatory voyage, with the artist as dead-pan conductor,
through abstract, pictorial, and philosophical dimensions.
Ed Ruscha has described the process, in his customary deprecatory
style:
Painting is all about capturing something. I never fully know
whether
I've captured anything, whether it's an event or a contradiction
or a kind of disorientation. Possibly all I've captured is an
end result devoid of anything objective or subjective or even
the fuzz in between. Art about the subject of sports is art usually
made by people who know and love sports. But I can't align myself
with my art in a way to confirm that I know and love the subjects
I paint, Sometimes I know my subject better than I love them and
sometimes just the opposite.
My
belief in commonplace issues continues to surface in my work and
I find that snowcapped mountains and aerial road maps are mundane
enough to glorify in paint. Often the subject such as a mountain
is used almost like background scenery to a stronger issue which
might be word combinations. I am more firmly rooted in issues
of abstract art that I am with things figurative, yet I use figurative
objects. This is a contradiction that is never resolved but does
not confuse me.
Ed
Ruscha's exhibition at the Anthony d'Offay Gallery coincides with
the start of an important retrospective, which runs from June
to September 2000 at the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden,
Washington D.C.; it will then be shown at the Museum of Contemporary
Art, Chicago from November 2000 to February 2001; Miami Art Museum,
from March to June 2001; Modern Art Museum, Fort Worth from July
to September 2001; and in the UK from October 2001 to January
2002 at the Museum of Modern Art, Oxford.
A
retrospective of Ruscha's editioned work (1959-1999) organised
by the Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, will open at the Los Angeles
County Museum of Art on 4 June 2000, before travelling to The
University of South Florida Contemporary Art Museum, Tampa, Florida,
in October 2000.
The artist will be giving a talk at the ICA, London from 7.30
- 9pm on 8 May. The event will include a screening of Ruscha's
first film, Premium (1971), starring the artist Larry Bell and
the model Lon Bing and based on the 1969 book Crackers,
which in turn was derived from the 1967 short-story by Mason Williams,
entitled "How to Derive the Maximum Enjoyment from Crackers".
Tickets are £7, £6 concessions, £5 ICA members.
Seats are limited so please book early. Tickets and further information
are available from the ICA box office: tel 020 7930 3647.
This London celebration of Ed Ruscha's work also includes the
launch of a signed limited edition CD, I Want to Hang Out with
Ed Ruscha, produced by the Rocket Gallery, London.
Mountains and Portraits, a limited edition boxed set of 9 illustrated
cards and envelopes, featuring an original text by J.G. Ballard,
will be on sale during the exhibition. A limited number of this
edition will be available signed by the artist.
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