 IAN
WALLACE
«A LITERATURE OF IMAGES»
15 NOVEMBER 2008 – 11 JANUARY 2009
The Kunsthalle Zürich is delighted to present the
exhibition «A Literature of Images», a comprehensive retrospective
of the work of Ian Wallace, who was born in 1943, lives and works in
Vancouver, and is one of the most important representatives of the Vancouver
conceptual art scene. The exhibition includes a wide range of the artist’s
works extending from the 1970s to the present day. Ian Wallace is renowned
as a key figure of the so-called “Vancouver School”. In the
course of his career, which is characterised by a continuous commitment
to teaching through his role as professor at a number of institutes,
including the University of British Colombia, he has had a crucial influence
and provided vital support to an entire generation of established artists
such as Jeff Wall, Rodney Graham, Ken Lum and Stan Douglas and young
artists, including Gareth Moore, Alex Morrison and Arabella Campbell.
Although his work can be found in leading museums in Canada and the USA,
he remains relatively unknown in Europe.
Ian Wallace’s work has its roots in abstract painting as influenced
by Minimal Art, however it has been characterised by the medium of photography
since the late 1960s. Important themes in Wallace’s work include
questions concerning the status of the media image, its representative
function, its political and social implications, and its shifting meaning
in the context of art.
As was the case with the exhibition of the work of
Liam Gillick «Three
Perspectives and a Short Scenario», which we presented at the beginning
of the year, this overview of a hitherto seldom-seen oeuvre is based
on a project involving several institutions. The exhibition in the Kunsthalle
Zürich was developed with the Witte de With Center for Contemporary
Art in Rotterdam and the Kunstverein für die Rheinlande und Westfalen
in Düsseldorf. The joint exhibition concept involves the presentation
and development by each of the institutions of its own thematic focus
within the artist’s oeuvre. Thus the retrospective «A Literature
of Images» covers not only a temporal and thematic range from the
artist’s early to contemporary works, it also links into his presence
beyond the exhibition locations.
The exhibition at the Kunsthalle Zürich focuses on works that explore
the relationship between the visual image and literature and works that
thematise Wallace’s compositions on the city as text – e.g.
Attack on Literature (1975) and the series In the Street (1988-89). Another
important focus is provided by the series At Work (1983 to the present),
in which Ian Wallace examines the role of the artist and the function
of the artist’s studio.
Attack on Literature tells the story of four protagonists, i.e. the poet,
two muses and a typewriter, on twelve large-format hand-coloured prints
based on a formal imitation of film stills. Tellingly, the sheets of
text emerging from the typewriter are empty. The work evokes an exploration
of language and literature from a fundamentally sceptical perspective
and of the rejective stance of art vis-à-vis narrative structures
in the 1970s; in his theoretical writings Wallace refers to French Symbolist
Stéphane Mallarmé and his late work Un coup de dés
(1898), in which the latter consummately translated his ideas into practice
in poetry that is highly innovative in terms of its vocabulary, rhythm
and syntax. Based on this, Wallace understands the blanks in the text
as a metaphor for silence but also the expression of a crisis and his
ambivalent attitude to the “empty” monochrome supports in
his own work.
While Wallace’s early work is characterised by monochrome painting,
he abandoned this technique around 1970 to devote himself to photography.
The self-reference inherent to the monochrome painting no longer satisfied
him. Wallace understands his early photographs of city scenes as the
attempt “to imagine the world as an image of the world” (Ian
Wallace). At the same time, working in this medium gives him the opportunity
to make a connection between conceptual art “in its purest form” and
the real world.
The street scenes presented at the Kunsthalle Zürich originate from
a third phase in Wallace’s work, in which he combines monochrome
painting and photography in one and the same work: in formal terms what
is involved here is the contrasting of the pure surface and an illusion
of three-dimensionality, in terms of content the two most important currents
in art since 1945 are united.
No paint, no easel, not even a camera are shown in the work In the Studio
(1983); just the artist in an empty gallery reading Søren Kierkegaard’s
On the Concept of Irony with Continual Reference to Socrates (1841).
The artist as thinker and doubter. Wallace continues to develop this
work to the present day by examining the meaning and function of the
artist’s studio.
The communicative and politically committed dimension of Wallace’s
photography are explored in the Witte de With Center in Rotterdam with
groups of works such as The Summerscript (1974), The Idea of the University
(1990) and Clayoquot Protest (1995). Finally, based on the multipart
work, Lookout (1979), the exhibition at the Kunstverein für die
Rheinlande und Westfalen Düsseldorf presents explorations of the
construction of imagery in association with a cinematographically based
staging of reality in the artist’s work.
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Kunsthalle Zurich thanks:
Präsidialdepartement
der Stadt Zürich, Luma Stiftung, Stiftung
Art Progressive, Deutsche Bank Stiftung
Witte de With, Center for Contemporary Art, Rotterdam, 8 November 2008 – 8
February 2009
Kunstverein für die Rheinlande und Westfalen, Düsseldorf,
18 October 2008 – 11 January 2009
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Events:
Friday, 14 November, 7 pm:
Opening of the exhibition, lecture by Ian Wallace followed by discussion
CONCERT: Saturday, 22 November, 8 pm:
The ensemble für neue musik plays “For the friends” – new
works by Martin Schmid.
www.ensemble.ch; www.martinschmid.info
PODIUM DISCUSSION: Friday, 28 November, 6.30 pm:
As part of the series “Qualität in der zeitgenössischen
Kunst” (“Quality in Contemporary Art”) in cooperation
with the Institute of Art History of the University of Zurich: #3: “Wen
fördern? Qualitätskriterien der staatlichen Kunstprogramme” (“Who
should we support? Quality criteria of the state art programmes”)
with Hortensia Völckers, Artistic Director, Kulturstiftung des Bundes
(German Federal Cultural Foundation), Halle an der Saale, and Hans Rudolf
Reust, President of the Eidgenössischen Kunstkommission (Swiss Federal
Art Commission), Bern
LECTURE: Friday, 12 December, 6 pm:
Alexandre Costanzo “The Possibility of a World”
Catalogue:
A comprehensive publication on the work of the Ian Wallace is being published
to mark the exhibition: Vanessa Joan Müller, Beatrix Ruf, Nicolaus
Schafhausen. with texts by Renske Janssen, Vanessa Joan Müller,
Jacques Rancière, Dieter Roelstraete, Monika Szewczyk and Ian
Wallace.
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