Maria Lassnig (1919–2014) ist eine der bedeutendsten Künstlerinnen der Gegenwart, die in ihrer bemerkenswerten Karriere eine Vielzahl an tiefgreifenden Arbeiten schuf. Die Maria Lassnig Stiftung, die sich gemäß dem Wunsch der Stifterin dem umfassenden Œuvre dieser bedeutenden Künstlerin widmet, ist erfreut kommende internationale Maria Lassnig Ausstellungen – in New York und Los Angeles – ankündigen zu dürfen.Petzel Gallery: Woman Power: Maria Lassnig in New York 1968–1980
Unter dem Titel Woman Power: Maria Lassnig in New York 1968–1980 präsentiert die Petzel Gallery vom 9. September bis 29. Oktober 2016 eine Auswahl an Werken Maria Lassnigs, die zwischen 1968 und 1980 entstanden – dem Zeitraum, in dem Lassnig in New York lebte und arbeitete.1968 übersiedelte die Künstlerin von Paris nach New York. Befreit von den Zwängen und der Enge der männlich dominierten Kunstszene Europas, schuf Lassnig in den 12 Jahren, die sie in den USA verbrachte, u.a. zahlreiche Gemälde, Zeichnungen, Aquarelle und Siebdrucke. Des Weiteren entwickelte Maria Lassnig in dieser überaus produktiven Schaffensphase ihr Konzept der Body Awareness weiter und experimentierte mit anderen Kunstformen wie etwa dem Animationsfilm.Die Ausstellung Woman Power zeigt nun einen Querschnitt aus der intensiven künstlerischen Zeit Lassnigs in New York.
Petzel Gallery is pleased to announce a new exhibition of works by Maria Lassnig entitled Woman Power: Maria Lassnig in New York 1968–1980, opening Friday, September 9th.
In 1968 at age 49, the painter Maria Lassnig moved from her residence in Paris to New York City to be in, as she called it, “the country of strong women” (1). Although well known in her native Austria, Lassnig was virtually unheard of in the States and lived, for the next 12 years, in relative anonymity renting walk-ups in the Lower East Side and Soho. According to those who knew her, she felt an affinity with the city; loved its constant activity, dynamism and the sense of freedom it engendered. New York City offered Lassnig a liberation of sorts from the male-dominated art scene of Europe; it gave her the opportunity to be an artist, not simply a female artist—and she worked prolifically, producing paintings, drawings, watercolors, silkscreen prints and animated films, often including hints of Americana in her work. Lassnig’s New York years were an incredibly formative time for the artist, a period in which she further developed her singular “body sensation” or “body awareness” aesthetic of the late 1940s. “Die Beute” (1972) and “Selbstportraet als Indianergirl” (1973) are indicative of this technique, using sensations of the body as conduits to envision the external world, a unique practice among artists at that time. Other paintings in this show, including a wonderful suite of pencil drawings exemplify how Lassnig also turned toward realism identified with self-portraiture. These four drawings can also be seen sequentially as a story-board, reflecting how the artistic freedom Lassnig enjoyed in the city allowed her to experiment in other art forms including film. She studied animated film at the School of Visual Arts in the early 1970s and in 1974 she became part of the Women/Artist/Filmmakers, Inc., a non-profit group, founded to support independent filmmakers. The exhibition will also devote an evening, on September 22nd, to screening a selection of shorts by members of the Women/Artist/Filmmakers, Inc. including a recently restored work of Maria’s as well as films by Silvianna Goldsmith, Rosalind Schneider, Carolee Schneemann, and Martha Nilsson Edelheit.
The exhibition Woman Power: Maria Lassnig in New York 1968–1980 brings together eight paintings, seven watercolors and nearly twenty drawings Lassnig made during her residence in New York City from 1968–1980. The mostly green-tinted paintings, document herself as well as her close friends, such as Iris and Silvia (Silvianna Goldsmith a founder of the Women/Artist/Filmmakers, Inc.). The watercolors depict views of city’s skylines while her pencil drawings capture the people she knew and her surroundings.
Numerous retrospectives have been devoted to Maria Lassnig’s paintings and drawings, among them the Tate Liverpool, Liverpool, 2016; MoMA PS1, Long Island City, NY, 2014; Lenbachhaus, Munich, 2010, the Museum Moderner Kunst Stiftung Ludwig (mumok), Vienna, 2009; the Serpentine Gallery, London, 2008; the Contemporary Arts Center, Cincinnati, 2008; the Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam, 1994; and the Centre Pompidou, Paris, 1995.
Maria Lassnig was born in Carinthia, Austria in 1919. She studied at the Akademie der Bildenden Künste in Vienna. After several visits to Paris in the 1950s, a 7-year stay in Paris in the 1960s, and a 12-year residency in New York, she returned to Vienna in 1980 and represented Austria that same year at the Biennale di Venezia. Maria Lassnig received the renowned Roswitha Haftmann Prize in 2002, the Max Beckmann award in 2004 as well as the Golden Lion for Lifetime Achievement from the Venice Biennale in 2013.
(1) Maria Lassnig, The Pen is the Sister of the Brush: Diaries 1943-1997, ed. Hans Ulrich Obrist (Göttingen: Steidl Hauser & Wirth, 2009).
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