Booth D7
Jun 11 - Jun 16, 2019
Press release for exhibition Booth D7
P.P.O.W is pleased to present historical and contemporary works by Carolee Schneemann, Betty Tompkins, Robin F. Williams and David Wojnarowicz. We are also delighted to present Martha Wilson’s Halifax Collection, 1971–74 at Art Basel Unlimited, in collaboration with mfc-michèle didier.
Carolee Schneemann (1939-2019) activated the
female nude with a multidisciplinary practice that spanned sixty years and
includes painting, assemblage, performance, and film. By connecting the kinetic
nature of her early paintings and assemblages to her radical performances and
films, Schneemann’s work has made a permanent mark on the history of art. P.P.O.W will present a collaged painting and
vintage photographs documenting her now iconic 1964 performance, Meat Joy. Performed in Paris, London,
and New York City, this group performance famously incorporated raw fish,
chickens, sausages, wet paint, plastic, rope, and shredded scrap paper into
what the artist described
as “an erotic rite – excessive, indulgent, a celebration of flesh as material.”
We will also present a selection of
vintage prints from the series Eye Body:
36 Transformative Actions for Camera, 1963, in which Schneemann merged her
body with her painting-constructions. Permeating boundaries between image-maker
and image, seeing and seen, this series represents the first time Schneemann
incorporated her physical body into the form of her work. In More than Meat
Joy, 1979, Schneemann wrote, “In 1963 to use my body as an extension of my
painting-constructions was to challenge and threaten the psychic territorial
power lines by which women were admitted to the Art Stud Club. […] I was using
the nude as myself -- the artist -- and as a primal, archaic force which could
unify energies I discovered as visual information.” Schneemann’s work has been exhibited at the Los Angeles
Museum of Contemporary Art; the Whitney Museum of American Art and The Museum of
Modern Art, New York; the Tate Modern, London; the Centre Pompidou, Paris; and
The Reina Sofia Museum, Madrid; among others. Carolee Schneemann: Kinetic Paintings recently traveled from Museum
der Moderne, Salzburg (2015) to the Museum fur Moderne Kunst, Frankfurt am
Main, Germany (2017) and MoMA PS1, New York (2018). In 2017, she was awarded
the Golden Lion for Lifetime Achievement at the 57th Venice
Biennale.
In a career
spanning five decades, Betty Tompkins (b.1945) has been celebrated and
scorned for her provocative feminist iconography. By appropriating imagery
created for male self-pleasure, Tompkins has reframed long-held taboos by
challenging critical discourses around content, style and scale. P.P.O.W will
present Cow Cunt #1, 1976, a
monumental grisaille painting depicting a common dairy cow resting atop a
vagina. This beguiling image exemplifies Tompkins’ signature painting style and
her enduring wit, as well as her mutual affinities for confrontation and whimsy.
We will also present four new works that unify her WOMEN Words series with her signature airbrushed paintings. By
combining text and image, Tompkins responds to ongoing political and cultural
debates about inequity, harassment and violence. One such painting reads: “Men
are better at art than women. Just look at art history.” Our presentation will
highlight that tension with patriarchal conventions continues to both stymie
and stimulate Tompkins’ work. In 1973, two significant paintings from her Fuck Paintings series were seized by
French customs and, in April 2019, Tompkins’ Instagram account was deleted
after she posted an image of a catalog reproduction of Fuck Painting #1, 1969, which is now in the permanent collection of
the Centre Pompidou. In a 2017 New York Times article, Rachel Corbett wrote, “Part
of what makes Tompkins’ work so enduringly potent today, and what made it too
shocking for its time, is not just its frank sexuality: It’s that the art […]
seethes with lust, ego, wisecracks and profanity. [She] demanded attention the
way men did — through shock and awe.” Tompkins’ recent solo exhibitions include
Fuck Paintings, etc., J Hammond
Projects, London, U.K. (2019); Will She
Ever Shut Up?, P.P.O.W (2018); and Betty
Tompkins, Ribordy Contemporary,
Geneva, Switzerland (2018). Her work has been featured in numerous group
exhibitions, including Half the Picture: A Feminist Look at the
Collection, The
Brooklyn Museum, Brooklyn, NY (2018); Histórias
da sexualidade, Museu de Arte de São Paulo (MASP), São Paolo, Brazil
(2018); Black Sheep Feminism: The Art of
Sexual Politics, Dallas Contemporary, Dallas, Texas (2016); and Elles, Centre Pompidou, Paris (2011),
among others.
Robin F. Williams (b. 1984) utilizes a variety of techniques, including oil, airbrush, and the
staining of raw canvas, to create figurative paintings that are at once
puzzling and familiar. Challenging systemic conventions of representation in
both art history and commercial advertising, as well as recent market impulses,
Williams refers to her women as “zombie nudes” – figures that are sentient, yet
ambiguously generated. Confronting the viewer with a crazed, almost terrifying
smile, Here’s Betty, 2019, reimagines
Richter’s Betty as a grown-up odalisque
who survived The Shining. Another
recent painting, Swamp Thing, 2019,
zooms-in on the mysterious bather from Manet’s iconic Le Déjeuner sur l'herbe, revealing a self-pleasuring siren luring
the viewer into the apparently toxic biome to which she’s been resigned. Taken
together, these works humorously update outmoded art historical depictions of women
and femininity while simultaneously exemplifying Williams’ mastery of a medium
long defined by male authorship and female subjection. With three solo
exhibitions at P.P.O.W,
Williams has garnered critical recognition for her contribution to figurative
and feminist painting, noting the complexity of her compositions, technical
virtuosity and the psychological depth of her narratives. In her review of
Williams' 2017 exhibition Your Good Taste
is Showing, Roberta Smith of the New York Times wrote: "These painting
are timely, but they are also enigmatic, off-putting and out there in rewarding
ways.” Williams received her BFA from the Rhode Island School of Design and has
been included in numerous exhibitions nationally and internationally. Williams
has been honored as the Josephine Mercy Heathcote Fellow at The MacDowell
Colony.
David
Wojnarowicz’s work has been exhibited at The Museum of Modern Art, New
York; Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago; The American Center, Paris, France; The
Busan Museum of Modern Art, Korea; Centro Galego de Art Contemporanea, Santiago
de Compostela, Spain; The Barbican Art Gallery, London; and the Museum Ludwig,
Cologne. His work is represented in the permanent collections of major museums
nationally and internationally and his life and work have been the subject of
significant scholarly studies. Wojnarowicz has had retrospectives at the
galleries of the Illinois State University, curated by Barry Blinderman (1990) and
at the New Museum, curated by Dan Cameron (1999). A third retrospective, David
Wojnarowicz: History Keeps Me Awake at Night, co-curated by David Kiehl and
David Breslin, opened at the Whitney Museum of American Art in July 2018. The
widely acclaimed exhibition was reviewed in Artforum, The Guardian, The New
York Times and The New Yorker, among others. The retrospective opened at the
Museo Reina Sofia, Madrid in May 2019 and will travel to the Musee d/Art
Moderne Grand-Duc Jean, Luxembourg City in November 2019. A concurrent
exhibition of Wojnarowicz’s films and photographs was presented at the KW
Institute for Contemporary Art, Berlin in February 2019.