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24 Grafton Street, W1S 4EZ, London, United Kingdom
Open: Tue-Sat 10am-6pm


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Tom Wesselmann: Collages 1959-1964

David Zwirner, London

Fri 29 Jan 2016 to Thu 24 Mar 2016

24 Grafton Street, W1S 4EZ Tom Wesselmann: Collages 1959-1964

Tue-Sat 10am-6pm

Artist: Tom Wesselmann

Organized in collaboration with The Estate of Tom Wesselmann, the exhibition presents over 30 works produced between 1959 and 1964—a significant period in the artist’s early career that presaged his emergence as a leading figure of Pop Art.
 


Artworks


Installation Views

Installation image for Tom Wesselmann: Collages 1959-1964, at David Zwirner Installation image for Tom Wesselmann: Collages 1959-1964, at David Zwirner Installation image for Tom Wesselmann: Collages 1959-1964, at David Zwirner Installation image for Tom Wesselmann: Collages 1959-1964, at David Zwirner Installation image for Tom Wesselmann: Collages 1959-1964, at David Zwirner Installation image for Tom Wesselmann: Collages 1959-1964, at David Zwirner

Organized in collaboration with The Estate of Tom Wesselmann, the exhibition presents over 30 works produced between 1959 and 1964—a significant period in the artist’s early career that presaged his emergence as a leading figure of Pop Art.
 
David Zwirner London Tom Wesselmann 1

David Zwirner London Tom Wesselmann 2

David Zwirner London Tom Wesselmann 3

David Zwirner London Tom Wesselmann 4

David Zwirner London Tom Wesselmann 5

David Zwirner London Tom Wesselmann 6

Since the mid-1960s, Wesselmann’s oeuvre has been synonymous with the bold, graphic, and large-scale imagery of Pop Art. On view at the gallery, his intimate, handwrought collages of the late 1950s and early 1960s reveal the germination of his iconic style, and attest to his lifelong interest in depicting still lifes, interiors, landscapes, and female nudes.

Wesselmann first explored the medium of collage in 1959, during his final year as an art student at The Cooper Union School of Art, New York, and it remained central to his practice throughout the early 1960s. Part of a generation of artists that reacted against the dominant action-oriented, gestural style of Abstract Expressionism, Wesselmann took interest in quotidian, figurative, and popular subject matter, as well as the representational and graphic qualities afforded by collage. Employing found materials culled from urban detritus and popular media such as postcards, wallpaper, stickers, and fabric, Wesselmann executed several discrete but related series of collages that variously depict figures (both anonymous and known), interiors, and still lifes. Formally, the works relate to early modernist collage and assemblage techniques and practices, and in their subject matter make numerous art historical references to the works of Henri Matisse, Edgar Degas, Wassily Kandinsky, and Hans Memling, among other artists. In his later collages, representations of contemporary life and consumer goods become more readily apparent, prefiguring the large-scale Pop Art paintings for which Wesselmann became recognized.

Among the works on view are several significant examples of his “Portrait Collages,” 1959-1960, the first group of collages executed by the artist. Characterized by depictions of one or two female figures seated in interior spaces and rendered in diverse materials including leaves, wallpaper, paint, and wood, the series makes frequent allusions to works by Old Masters, as well as contemporary artists, such as Willem de Kooning and other Abstract Expressionists. These first iterations of collage, in particular, are marked by dynamic patterning, idiosyncratic material juxtapositions, flattened forms, and rich, vibrant color that would remain consistent features of his work throughout his career.

Also included in the exhibition are a number of works from Wesselmann’s “Little Great American Nudes” series, a pivotal body of work begun in 1961 that led directly to the development of his larger-scale “Great American Nudes,” 1961-1973, for which he gained art-world acclaim, and of which the first example, Great American Nude #1, is on view.

Begun in 1962, Wesselmann’s “Little Still Life” series demonstrates the artist’s increasing interest in depicting contemporary, popular subject matter such as food, articles of clothing, and flowers, which he typically represented in tabletop displays. Like his nudes, this series increased greatly in scale, as evidenced in his 1963 Still Life #29—the artist’s first large-scale still life, of which only four exist (one example is in the collection of the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York). As Marco Livingstone has remarked regarding the artist’s collages, “Wesselmann was able not only to make art that reflected his identity and the circumstances of his life, but also to expand on the advances made by the previous generation towards the establishment of an art that could be defined as specifically American.”(1)

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(1)Marco Livingstone, “Small Early Collages,” in Tom Wesselmann: A Retrospective Survey 1969-1992. Exh. cat. (Tokyo: Art Life Ltd., 1993), p. 39.

Tom Wesselmann (1931-2004) is well known for his collages, paintings, and sculptures depicting still lifes, landscapes, and nudes. He attended The Cooper Union School of Art, New York, from 1956-1959, and was co-founder, with artists Marcus Ratliff and Jim Dine, of the influential Judson Gallery, New York (which operated from 1957 to the late 1960s). In the 1960s, he emerged as a leading figure of Pop Art.

Wesselmann’s works are included in numerous museum collections including the Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo; the Art Institute of Chicago; the Hara Museum of Contemporary Art, Tokyo; the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, D.C.; the Kaiser-Wilhelm Museum, Krefeld, Germany; The Museum of Modern Art, New York; the Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza, Madrid; the Museum Ludwig, Cologne; the Nasjonalgalleriet, Oslo; the Nationalgalerie, Berlin; the Philadelphia Museum of Art; the Walker Art Center, Minneapolis; and the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York.

Photography: Alex Delfanne. © Estate of Tom Wesselmann/Licensed by VAGA, New York, NY

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