Tony Cragg: Incidents

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Tony Cragg: Incidents

Marian Goodman New York | 28 October - 20 December 2022

Marian Goodman Gallery is delighted to present Incidents, an exhibition of new sculptures by Tony Cragg. The exhibition presents the...
Tony Cragg
Justine, 2021
Bronze
86 5/8 x 37 3/8 x 31 1/2 in. (220 x 95 x 80 cm)

Marian Goodman Gallery is delighted to present Incidents, an exhibition of new sculptures by Tony Cragg.  The exhibition presents the latest developments and formal innovations in Cragg’s sculptural practice with new works from 2021-2022 in stone, bronze, steel, wood, and glass. 

Over the past three decades, Cragg’s complex approach to polymorphic forms has broadened and transformed our understanding of what sculpture can be, and demonstrated how to imagine beyond the confines of the quotidian and utilitarian spheres.  Harnessing the expressive potential of materials and the interpretive syntheses of energies therein, Cragg’s lifelong dedication to the study of the material world ­– how materials affect, inform, and shape us – is on view in his ever-evolving and acutely observant re-interpretation of the world.

Download Press Release | List of Works

Throughout his career Cragg has experimented with a range of forms, often working in groups or ‘families’ of works.  From found objects and assemblages, to cumulative and sedimented forms, to vessels and mathematical structures, and from stacks and striations to human profiles and open structures, Cragg’s varied approaches investigate body, material, object, and space and the relationship between them.  Summoning ideas and emotions in the viewer, he challenges us to look beyond the imitation of nature—to dream beyond the nascent and imagine meaningful forms that have not yet been made. Often these dreams begin in the daily practice of drawing, visualizing the unseen, unearthing the interstices of a new reality.

In the current exhibition, a new series of sculptures are shown here in the US for the first time. Beginning in the North Gallery, sculptures in wood, bronze and stone explore the unexpected interface between abstraction and figuration. Masks, made from stacked and rounded strata, allude to antecedents of striation and compression in Cragg’s work and summon ancient and contemporary forms. Integers, lush, sinuous forms in stone and bronze, are derived from an intimate series of compositions, and rendered here as a composite of fragments, a torso, for instance, devoid of anatomic elements.

Hollow Heads feature composite elliptical heads, each with hollowed forms that are subtracted from and rest inside one another.  An intricate tête-à-tête of fragments in dialogue with one another, they articulate Cragg’s interest in interiors and fragmentation. In No Time, a bronze work, equates complex geological form with organic agglomerations such as bacteria colonies, plant cultures and human crowds.

Cragg’s original compositions in glass mark the return to a material which he experimented with in the nineties. Here, he interprets the form in novel ways, working with master glass makers to manipulate matter in its molten state into original hand-blown sculptures. Whereas the earlier glass works investigated found forms such as the glass bottle, which later prompted inquiry into the vessel itself, the new works, such as Curl or Processor, originate in singular compositions and around themes such as the mutability of totemic form, compound structures, and the axial rotation of an object.

In the South Gallery, Cragg advances his inquiry into open steel structures that he has been exploring for the last ten years in a series of works he then called Hedges, a reference to the thickets and plants he experienced as a child in the south of England. In the new series Incidents, Cragg exploits the innate physical strength of steel to look at the essence of gravity-resisting structures without resorting to industrially formatted materials, such as i-beams and the sheet materials that have dominated and dictated steel forms since the beginning of its historical usage in sculpture making.  These upright formations pulse with positive and negative space and refute any proclivity of gravity or stasis. The works — Incident (Stance); Incident (Solo); Incident (Vertical); Incident (Upwards) and Incident (Seed) — cast in corten steel as well as stainless steel, release these strongest of materials from their stiff, jarring industrial components. Cragg’s Dreamsleepers, 2022, in steel, are based on an African headrest that fascinated him for its closeness to the original branch that it was carved from, with its animated form and its minimalist structural functionality: a combination of rationality and dream-like thought.

Important upcoming projects in 2023 include solo exhibitions at Graphische Sammlung Pinakothek der Moderne in Munich and The Twist at...
Photo by David Kaluza

Important upcoming projects in 2023 include solo exhibitions at Graphische Sammlung Pinakothek der Moderne in Munich and The Twist at Kistefos in Norway.

Tony Cragg was born in Liverpool, England in 1949. He has lived and worked in Wuppertal, Germany since 1977. He has been the recipient of numerous awards including the Order of Merit of North Rhine-Westphalia (2018); the Lifetime Achievement in Contemporary Sculpture Award, The International Sculpture Center (2017); the Barnett Newman Foundation Award (2016); the Commander of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire, (CBE) (2016); the Rheinischer Kulturpreis, Sparkassen Kulturstiftung, Rhineland (2013); the Cologne Fine Art Award (2012); the prestigious Praemium Imperiale Award, Tokyo (2007).

He represented Britain at the 43rd Venice Biennale in 1988, and the same year was awarded the Turner Prize at the Tate Gallery, London. He served as Director of the Kunstakademie, Dusseldorf, after having been a Tutor and Professor there since 1978.

 

There have been many important solo exhibitions of Cragg’s work worldwide, most recently at Albertina Museum, Vienna, Austria (2022); Heart/ Herning Museum of Contemporary Art, Herning, Denmark (2022); Museo Novecento, Florence, Italy (2022); Museo del Vetro, Venice, Italy (2021); Haus am Waldsee, Berlin, Germany (2021); Houghton Hall, Norfolk, UK (2021); Boboli Gardens, Florence, Italy (2019); MUDAM Luxembourg (2017); Yorkshire Sculpture Park, UK (2017); Museo Nacional Havana, Cuba (2017); Von der Heydt, Wuppertal, Germany (2016);  Hermitage Museum, St. Petersburg, Russia (2016); Benaki Museum, Athens (2015); Madison Square Park, New York (2014); Heydar Aliyev Center, Baku, Azerbaijan (2014); Lehmbruck Museum, Duisburg, Germany (2013); CAFA Art Museum, Central Academy of Fine Arts, Beijing (2012); The Nasher Sculpture Center, Dallas (2011); Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, Edinburgh (2011); and the Musée du Louvre, Paris (2011).

For further inquiry, please visit mariangoodman.com, or contact the Gallery at 212 977 7160.

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