> DESCRIPTION
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RONI
HORN
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RONI
HORN July 24 - August 29, 2008
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Opening
reception for the artist: Thursday, July 24th, from 6 to 8 pm
"The conceptual origins of one work often bleed over into another
form. That's why I've never restricted myself to any single idiom… Each form,
to me, comments on and enriches the experience of the other."
-- Roni Horn
Gagosian Gallery is pleased to announce an exhibition by Roni Horn. This will
be the artist's first solo exhibition in Los Angeles in almost ten years, and
her first with the gallery.
Horn's oeuvre, which spans almost four decades, encompasses sculpture,
drawing, photography, language, and site-specific installation. Compelled by
the elusive nature of identity, she concentrates on the phenomenological
problems of material, form, time, presence, and place in nuanced
installations and exemplary books that brim with subtle energy and quiet
intensity. The qualities of Iceland's unique environment have inspired many
of her most acclaimed works, including the ongoing series of volumes To
Place (1990-) and the photographic cycles You Are the Weather and Pi.
Last year, her sustained dialogue with Iceland found a permanent place in Vatnasafn/Library
of Water, a project with Artangel Trust that is at once a building, a
sculpture, and an ecological and literary resource for the community.
"Pairing," or the use of doubling, is a pervasive strategy in
Horn's graphic, photographic and sculptural work, designed to invoke the
viewer's experience of engaged memory. In this exhibition, a pair of large
cast-glass sculptures, Opposite of White, v.2 (large) and Opposite
of White, v.1 (large), are set apart spatially to be united by the
process of viewing. Continuing the intensely processual portraiture that she
began with You Are the Weather (1994), five sequences of ten
photographs, Untitled (Isabelle Huppert) 2005, capture the iconic
actress in many different moods and characters, a sustained paradox of
fleeting expressions. The active relationship between perceiving and
remembering is further mined in an ongoing series of inlaid aluminum rod
sculptures begun in the early nineties. These lean on one end against the
wall, bearing snatches of verse by two favored referents, Flannery O'Connor
and Emily Dickinson. Though the three genres of work may not appear to bear
any obvious relation to one another, within the time and experience of the
exhibition their relational significance finds full value.
Roni Horn was born in New York in 1955. She studied at the Rhode
Island School of Design and Yale University. She has received many awards
including three NEA Fellowships, a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1990. and the
Alpert Award in 1998. Her work has been shown in and collected by major
museums throughout the world, including the Musée d'Art Moderne de la Ville
de Paris (1999); Dia Center for the Arts (2001); Art Institute of Chicago and
Centre Georges Pompidou (2004); Chinati Foundation, Marfa, TX. A
retrospective of her work will open at the Tate Modern in 2009 and travel to
the Whitney Museum of American Art.
For more information, please contact the gallery.