Gabriel Orozco
Aug 1 - Oct 27, 2013 Reception: Wed Jul 31 6pm - 8pm
Gabriel Orozco is one of the foremost international artists of our age. This exhibition cuts a conceptual slice through his practice
Gabriel Orozco (born Jalapa, Veracruz, 1962) is one of the foremost international artists of our age. Rising to prominence in the early 1990s, he has developed a consistently innovative practice, making work which not only captures the imagination but also powerfully engages with key material and conceptual issues of what it is to make art now. His practice encompasses photography, painting, sculpture and installation, creating some of the most iconic images of recent contemporary art such as the modified Citroen DS La DS (1993), the series of photographs of pairs of yellow scooters Until You Find Another Yellow Schwalbe (1995), and the chequerboard skull Black Kites (1997).
The Fruitmarket Gallery is delighted to be able to present this new exhibition of Orozco’s work. Taking the 2005 painting The Eye of Go as its starting point, the exhibition looks at how the circular geometric motif of this painting – part of a way of thinking for Orozco, a way to organise ideas of structure, organisation and perspective – migrates onto other work, recurring in other paintings, sculptures and photographs. A highlight of the exhibition will be a series of large geometric works on acetate, made in the mid 1990s, yet never before exhibited. Rather than surveying the whole range of Orozco’s practice, the exhibition seeks to cut a conceptual slice through it, to look deeply into the mechanics of the artist’s thinking and working process. Not only will the exhibition propose a different view of Orozco’s major contribution to changes in art in the 90s but bring to the fore the urgent problem of art’s ‘makeability’ now.
The exhibition is curated by art historian and writer on contemporary art Professor Briony Fer, who contributed ‘Constellations in Dust: Notes on the Notebooks’ to the recent Tate/MOMA/Pompidou retrospective catalogue. It will be accompanied by a new publication, written by Briony Fer.
Louise Bourgeois I Give Everything Away
Oct 26, 2013 - Feb 16, 2014
Focusing on drawing and writing, the exhibition cuts to the heart of the artist’s work.
In early 2004, The Fruitmarket Gallery was proud to present Stitches in Time, a major exhibition of work
by Louise Bourgeois, one of the greatest and most influential artists of our time. The exhibition was curated by Frances Morris, Head of Collections (International Art) at Tate Modern, who went on to curate the major retrospective of Bourgeois’s work at Tate Modern in 2007. Now, almost exactly ten years after first showing the work of this extraordinary artist to audiences in Edinburgh, The Fruitmarket Gallery is delighted to be able to present a new exhibition, again curated by Frances Morris, of Bourgeois’s works on paper.
Central to the exhibition are Bourgeois’s Insomnia Drawings, a remarkable suite of 220 drawings and writings made between 1994 and June 1995 specifically to combat the insomnia which Bourgeois once described as regulating her life. Created in the suspended state between sleeping and waking, The Insomnia Drawings contain all the major themes of Bourgeois’s work and reveal the close link between drawing and writing that is such a key part of her practice.
The Insomnia Drawings, generously lent to The Fruitmarket Gallery by the Daros Collection in Switzerland, are complemented and extended by works on paper selected by Frances Morris from the Louise Bourgeois Trust. Focusing on drawing and writing, the exhibition cuts to the heart of the artist’s work, providing both a key to and a celebration of her unique creative energy.
This exhibition complements a major ARTIST ROOMS exhibition of work by Louise Bourgeois on display at the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art – Louise Bourgeois: ‘A Woman Without Secrets’, Modern One, until 18 May 2014.
Tania Kovats
Mar 14 - Jun 15, 2014
Tania Kovats creates sculpture, installation & large scale time-based projects exploring our experience and understanding of landscape.
Tania Kovats is a British artist whose practice encompasses sculpture, installation and large-scale time-based projects exploring our experience and understanding of landscape; drawing and paying attention to others’ drawings; writing, grouping and gathering things together. Recent major projects have included Meadow (2007), a transported wildflower meadow; The Museum of the White Horse (2007), a travelling landscape museum; Tree (2009), a permanent installation for the Natural History Museum; British Isles (2004) and All the Islands of All the Oceans (2005), two series of drawings; and The Drawing Book – A Survey of Drawing: The Primary Means of Expression. In May 2012 a new, large-scale sculpture, Rivers, was installed in the landscape of Jupiter Artland outside Edinburgh.
The Fruitmarket Gallery is currently preparing a two-part collaboration with Tania Kovats. First, an exhibition which presents an ambitious new work in the context of the artist’s ongoing practice. The new work, All the Seas, is a sculptural presentation of water from all the world’s seas, collected by the artist with the help of a global network of people drawn in by the poetry of the idea of bringing all the waters of the world to one place. Bottles of seawater have been arriving at The Fruitmarket Gallery and at the artist’s studio since late 2012, and the network of connections that the piece represents will grow week by week until late 2013, when the piece itself is made.
All the Seas will be presented as part of a major exhibition of Kovats’s sculpture and drawing. Called Oceans, the exhibition brings together work made since 1993 that has to do in some way with the sea. Sculptures referencing cliff formations, a machine that mimics the formation of mountains, drawings of islands, maps and mineralogical constellations, and a new sculpture of proliferating barnacles provide a rich context for All the Seas.
The second part of the Gallery’s collaboration with Tania Kovats is a publication, Drawing Water: Drawing as a Mechanism for Exploration, which accompanies the exhibition but is not a catalogue for it. Since publishing The Drawing Book in 2006, Kovats has continued to be attracted to the wealth of drawings of others. She is currently bringing these together in a new publication looking particularly at drawings of exploration and discovery by a wide selection of practitioners, drawings which seek, like All the Seas, to find a way to make sense of the world.
This collaboration between The Fruitmarket Gallery and Tania Kovats itself explores new territory, in a new model for how an institution might work with an artist to make their ideas and enthusiasms available to the public. The exhibition, All the Seas and the book are independent yet contextualise and amplify each other – All the Seas is a wide-ranging, participatory sculptural installation and the publication is an intimate vehicle for independent enquiry, but both have to do with gathering and grouping, and with discovering through presenting.
Jim Lambie
Jul 23 - Oct 19, 2014
Lambie is one of the foremost Scottish artists of his generation, known for work which attracts both popular appeal and critical acclaim.
In the summer of 2014, The Fruitmarket Gallery will be turned over to Jim Lambie, whose visually compelling, generous and beguiling work will spill out of the exhibition galleries to fill all the public space of the building, including the café and bookshop.
Born in Glasgow in 1964, Lambie is one of the foremost Scottish artists of his generation, known for work which attracts both popular appeal and critical acclaim. He came to prominence in 1999 with Zobop, a floor-based sculptural intervention that consists of continuous lines of vinyl tape laid in concentric circuits of a room from its outside edges to its centre. Gathering intensity as it outlines architectural features such as columns, alcoves and doorways, the work fills the space with a disorientating visual rhythm, its insistent articulation of the space serving to confuse our experience of it. Zobop is typical of Lambie’s work in that it makes its magic with relatively humble materials – everyday objects like buttons, bags, clothing, mirrors, magazines, discarded furniture are the stuff of Lambie’s art. That and music memorabilia – records, record sleeves, turntables.
The Fruitmarket Gallery’s exhibition will draw together work made throughout Lambie’s career, including the iconic Zobop and Ultra Low, an early video constructed from overlaid images of the artist smoking an entire packet of cigarettes in the dark, the resulting firefly flickers making, as Ross Sinclair wrote in a review of Lambie’s first Tramsmission exhibition in Frieze in 1999, ‘a complex map of the casual movements your arms and head make while your mind wanders’. These works will be joined by others tracing the development of Lambie’s visual language from 1999 to now, creating a memorable exhibition and providing a context for a major public intervention that we hope Lambie will make in the city of Edinburgh. The artist is currently looking at potential sites for a work of public sculpture that will bring his singular vision out of the gallery and into the fabric of the city.