> DESCRIPTION
The first major United States retrospective of the work of New
York-based artist Lawrence Weiner (b.1942, Bronx, NY), one of the key
figures associated with the emergence and foundations of conceptual art
in the 1960s, Lawrence Weiner: AS FAR AS THE EYE CAN SEE provides a comprehensive examination of Weiner�s remarkable and
cohesive oeuvre, assembling key selections and bodies of work from
throughout his 40-year career. Lawrence Weiner has defined art as �the
relationship of human beings to objects and objects to objects in
relation to human beings,� and that premise remains at the core of all
of his work. The conditions of a work of art have been the basis of
Weiner�s approach since 1967, using language as a material object. The
exhibition represents the full range of Weiner�s practice, from the
Propeller and Removal paintings of the 1960s, to the artist�s �specific
and general� works�language-based pieces that have maintained a
consistent presence in his work since 1968. The exhibition also
includes the full breadth of his production with works on paper, films,
videos, books, posters, public commissions, multiples, and audio works.
Co-organized by The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, and the
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, this landmark exhibition is
co-curated by MOCA Senior Curator Ann Goldstein and Whitney Museum
Chief Curator and Associate Director for Programs Donna De Salvo. At
the Whitney Museum from November 15, 2007 to February 10, 2008, the
exhibition will be on view at MOCA from April 13 to July 14, 2008. A
comprehensive catalogue, co-published by MOCA and the Whitney Museum
and produced in close collaboration with the artist, accompanies the
exhibition. Designed by award-winning graphic designer Lorraine Wild,
the publication features essays by Kathryn Chiong, Liam Gillick, Edward
Leffingwell, Dieter Schwarz, and Gregor Stemmrich, along with
exhibition curators Donna De Salvo and Ann Goldstein, and a special
contribution by Alice Zimmerman. The catalogue (412 pages; $60) is
distributed by Yale University Press. The book is available through the
Whitney and MOCA bookstores.