ART-TRIBUTE:Bruce Nauman-Disappearing Acts

Bruce Nauman, Sex and Death by Murder and Suicide, 1985, Neon tubing mounted on aluminum monolith, 198 × 199 × 32 cm, Emanuel Hoffmann Foundation, on permanent loan to the Öffentliche Kunstsammlung Basel, © Bruce Nauman / 2017, ProLitteris-Zurich, Photo: Tom Bisig-BaselBruce Nauman is a central figure in Contemporary Art and one of the most influential artists of his time. Throughout his career, Nauman has continuously explored how ways of understanding ourselves in the world are structured by our phenomenological and psychological experience of time, space, sound, movement, and architecture, as well as by power relations and language.

By Dimitris Lempesis
Photo: Laurenz Foundation Archive

The exhibition “Disappearing Acts” is the first comprehensive retrospective of Bruce Nauman’s work across all mediums in over 20 years, and is build upon the rich holdings of Schaulager, Laurenz Foundation in Basel and The Museum of Modern Art. Covering his entire career, from the earliest fully realized sculptures of 1965 to his most recent work, the exhibition will provide an opportunity to experience Nauman’s command of a wide range of mediums, from drawing, printmaking, photography, and neon, to performance, video, film, sculpture, and large-scale installations, including “Days” (2009), a 14-channel sound installation for which Nauman won the Golden Lion for Best National Participation at the Venice Biennial in 2009.  Over the decades, Bruce Nauman has repeatedly managed to assume a pioneering role, whether through his interest in the latest developments in media technology or by exploring contentious social issues. These are just some of the attributes that explain his special status in the contemporary art scene and contribute to his lasting relevance. The exhibition traces strategies of withdrawal in Nauman’s work , both literal and figurative incidents of removal, deflection, and concealment. With a keen eye, he investigates the experience of one’s own body and its relation to space. His works often have the character of simple laboratory tests or critical self-interrogations. Few can match Nauman’s wide-ranging intellect, deadpan wit, or formal invention. The artist strips away extraneous ideas and materials until he finds the most pointed but modest way to express his themes. While his work is never overtly political, a persistent sense of urgency pervades, with the artist insisting the viewer “Pay attention” an admonition that appears in reverse on one of his prints. Nauman has said his real interest is in “Investigating the possibilities of what art may be” rather than in making objects. For well over 40 years he has invigorated his work by questioning the philosophical underpinnings that define and give shape to it. At a time when young artists routinely cross disciplinary boundaries and performance has found a central place in museums, it remains difficult to single out another sculptor who has worked for so long and so persuasively in so many mediums

Info: Curators:  Kathy Halbreich, Heidi Naef, Assistant Curators: Isabel Friedli and Taylor Walsh, Schaulager, Laurenz Foundation, Ruchfeldstr. 19, Münchenstein, Duration: 17/3-26/8/18, www.schaulager.org

Bruce Nauman, Square, Triangle, Circle, 1984, Plaster, steel and wood, 119 × 614.5 × 614.8 cm, Emanuel Hoffmann Foundation, on permanent loan to the Öffentliche Kunstsammlung Basel, © Bruce Nauman / 2017, ProLitteris-Zurich, Photo: Robert Bayer-Basel
Bruce Nauman, Square, Triangle, Circle, 1984, Plaster, steel and wood, 119 × 614.5 × 614.8 cm, Emanuel Hoffmann Foundation, on permanent loan to the Öffentliche Kunstsammlung Basel, © Bruce Nauman / 2017, ProLitteris-Zurich, Photo: Robert Bayer-Basel

 

 

Bruce Nauman, First Hologram Series: Making Faces B, 1968, Holographic image on glass, 20.3 × 25.4 cm, Emanuel Hoffmann Foundation, gift of the president 2013, on permanent loan to the Öffentliche Kunstsammlung Basel, © Bruce Nauman / 2017, ProLitteris, Zurich, photo: Bisig & Bayer-Basel
Bruce Nauman, First Hologram Series: Making Faces B, 1968, Holographic image on glass, 20.3 × 25.4 cm, Emanuel Hoffmann Foundation, gift of the president 2013, on permanent loan to the Öffentliche Kunstsammlung Basel, © Bruce Nauman / 2017, ProLitteris, Zurich, photo: Bisig & Bayer-Basel

 

 

Bruce Nauman, End of the World, 1996, Three-channel video installation (colour, sound), Dimensions variable, Emanuel Hoffmann Foundation, on permanent loan to the Öffentliche Kunstsammlung Basel, © Bruce Nauman / 2017, Pro Litteris,Photo: Öffentliche Kunstsammlung-Basel, Martin P. Bühler
Bruce Nauman, End of the World, 1996, Three-channel video installation (colour, sound), Dimensions variable, Emanuel Hoffmann Foundation, on permanent loan to the Öffentliche Kunstsammlung Basel, © Bruce Nauman / 2017, Pro Litteris,Photo: Öffentliche Kunstsammlung-Basel, Martin P. Bühler

 

 

Bruce Nauman, Seven Wax Templates of the Left Half of my Body Spread over 12 Feet, 1967, Pencil and watercolour on paper, 44.5 × 59.8 cm, Emanuel Hoffmann Foundation, on permanent loan to the Öffentliche Kunstsammlung Basel, © Bruce Nauman / 2017, ProLitteris-Zurich, Photo: Öffentliche Kunstsammlung-Basel, Martin P. Bühler
Bruce Nauman, Seven Wax Templates of the Left Half of my Body Spread over 12 Feet, 1967, Pencil and watercolour on paper, 44.5 × 59.8 cm, Emanuel Hoffmann Foundation, on permanent loan to the Öffentliche Kunstsammlung Basel, © Bruce Nauman / 2017, ProLitteris-Zurich, Photo: Öffentliche Kunstsammlung-Basel, Martin P. Bühler

 

 

Bruce Nauman, Myself as a Marble Fountain, 1967, Ink, with wash, on paper, 48.3 × 60.8 cm, Emanuel Hoffmann Foundation, on permanent loan to the Öffentliche Kunstsammlung Basel, © Bruce Nauman / 2017, ProLitteris-Zurich, Photo: Öffentliche Kunstsammlung-Basel, Martin P. Bühler
Bruce Nauman, Myself as a Marble Fountain, 1967, Ink, with wash, on paper, 48.3 × 60.8 cm, Emanuel Hoffmann Foundation, on permanent loan to the Öffentliche Kunstsammlung Basel, © Bruce Nauman / 2017, ProLitteris-Zurich, Photo: Öffentliche Kunstsammlung-Basel, Martin P. Bühler