Andrea Rosen Gallery is delighted to announce Michael Raedecker’s fifth exhibition at the gallery, highlighting substantial new developments in the artist’s practice and anticipating an important traveling mid-career survey show opening at the Wilhelm-Hack Museum at the end of this year.
In a recent shift, Raedecker began cutting his painted canvases apart and stitching the fragments back together to form new compositions. The cut is disruptive and perverse: the rip becomes a repair and the fragmented scene becomes newly reanimated. In his newest body of work, Raedecker uses the intentional precision of this technique to interrogate our sentimental attachment to highly recognizable yet generic symbols of the good life: the suburban model home, the palm tree, the chandelier. These anonymous objects, repeated and set adrift in gestural monochromatic fields of paint, are placeholders for the whole history of the world, appearing and disappearing on the surface of the paintings.
The initial familiarity of these scenes allows for our personal investment in them, but the literal trace of the object, created by the puncture of the needle and gauge of the thread, continues to pull us back to the surface and to the painting itself as the object of extraordinary investment and inquiry. For Raedecker the decorative façade of a house is analogous to a painting – its flatness resists vision, reflecting instead the viewer’s own desires and fears. The painting, like the façade or the almost abstract filigree of a chandelier picked out in thread, is always a fragile surface, its loose narratives caving in on themselves, turning upside down and failing to resolve into known pictorial categories. This uncanny loop of recognition and estrangement is intensified by the newest sutures, which disrupt the integrity of the picture and memorialize the essential violence of representation.
The title of the exhibition invokes the tour as a journey undertaken for pleasure or inspection -- a contemplative invitation to the viewer with various way stations for connection, exchange and new perspectives.
Michael Raedecker was born in Amsterdam, Netherlands in 1963 and currently lives and works in London. He studied at the Rijksakademie van Beeldende Kunsten, Amsterdam (1993 – 1994), and at Goldsmiths College, London (1996 – 1997). In 2000, Raedecker was shortlisted for the prestigious Turner Prize. Recent solo exhibitions include volume at Hauser & Wirth, London (2012); Galerie Max Hetzler, Berlin (2010); and line-up which opened at Camden Arts Centre, London, England (2009) and travelled to Gemeentemuseum Den Haag, The Hague, Netherlands (2009) and Carré d’Art – Musée d'Art Contemporain de Nîmes (2010).
For media inquiries contact Lance Brewer at l.brewer@rosengallery.com and Michelle Finocchi at michelle@michellefinocchi.com.
Published on the occassion of the exhibition Michael Raedecker: tour, organized by the Sprengel Museum Hannover (March 9 - June 15, 2014) in cooperation with the Wilhelm-Hack-Museum in Ludwigshafen (December 1, 2013 - February 23, 2014).
Publisher: Sprengel Museum Hannover / Wilhelm Hack-Museum
Language: German/English
106 pages, 43 illustrations
Hardcover
Published on the occasion of the exhibition:
Michael Raedecker
Galerie Max Hetzler, Berlin, Germany
June 12 - July 17, 2010
Published on the occasion of the exhibition:
Michael Raedecker: line-up
Camden Arts Centre, London
May 1 - June 28, 2009
Traveled to:
GemeenteMuseum, The Hague, Netherlands, July 11 - November 1, 2009
Carré d'Art Musée d'Art Contemporain, Nimes, France, January 27 - April 25, 2010
Published on the occasion of the exhibition:
Michael Raedecker: show
Hauser & Wirth Zürich, Zurich, 2005
Published on the occasion of the exhibtion:
Michael Raedecker: forevernevermore
Salzburger Kunstverein, Salzburg, Austria
July 24 - October 3, 2004
Published on the occasion of:
Michael Raedecker: SubUrban
Knoxville Museum of Art, Knoxville, Tennessee
August 20 - December 5, 2004
Published on the occasion of the exhibition:
Michael Raedecker: instinction
Centro Nazionale per le Arti Contemporanee, Rome, Italy, 2002
Museum für GegenwartskunstBasel, Switzerland, 2003
Published on the occasion of the exhibition:
Michael Raedecker: extract
Stedelijk Van Abbemuseum, Eindhoven, 1999
2012
acrylic and thread on canvas
70 3/4 x 104 inches (179.7 x 264.2 cm)
ARG# RAM2012-005
2013
acrylic and thread on canvas
69 x 102 3/8 inches (175.3 x 260 cm)
ARG# RAM2013-007
2012
acrylic and thread on canvas
71 x 103 1/8 inches (180.3 x 261.9 cm)
ARG# RAM2012-006
2012
acrylic and thread on canvas
70 3/4 x 104 inches (179.7 x 264.2 cm)
ARG# RAM2012-005
2013
acrylic and thread on canvas
53 3/4 x 44 1/4 inches (136.5 x 112.4 cm)
ARG# RAM2013-009
2013
acrylic and thread on canvas
82 1/4 x 67 inches (208.9 x 170.2 cm)
ARG# RAM2013-008
2012-2013
acrylic and thread on canvas
60 7/8 x 48 5/8 inches (154.6 x 123.5 cm)
ARG# RAM2013-011
2013
acrylic and thread on canvas
75 x 39 1/4 inches (190.5 x 99.7 cm)
ARG# RAM2013-002
2013
acrylic and thread on canvas
71 x 47 3/8 inches (180.3 x 120.3 cm)
ARG# RAM2013-004
2013
acrylic and thread on canvas
51 3/8 x 45 inches (130.5 x 114.3 cm)
ARG# RAM2013-006
2013
acrylic and thread on canvas
75 1/4 x 95 3/4 inches (191.1 x 243.2 cm)
ARG# RAM2013-005