Barbara Kruger
Barbara Kruger | |
---|---|
Barbara Kruger at ACCA, Melbourne | |
Born |
Newark, New Jersey | January 26, 1945
Nationality | American |
Field | Visual Art |
Training | Syracuse University, Parsons School of Design, New York |
Barbara Kruger (born January 26, 1945) is an American conceptual artist. Much of her work consists of black-and-white photographs overlaid with declarative captions—in white-on-red Futura Bold Oblique or Helvetica Ultra Condensed. The phrases in her works often include pronouns such as "you", "your", "I", "we", and "they". Kruger lives and works in New York and Los Angeles.
Career in magazine design
Kruger was born into a lower-middle-class family[1][2][3] in Newark, New Jersey. Her father worked as a chemical technician, her mother as a legal secretary. She graduated from Weequahic High School.[4] After attending Syracuse University and studying art and design with Diane Arbus and Marvin Israel at Parsons School of Design in New York, Kruger obtained a design job at Condé Nast Publications. She initially worked as a designer at Mademoiselle Magazine and later moved on to work part-time as a picture editor at House and Garden, Aperture, and other publications.[5] In her early years as a visual artist, Kruger crocheted, sewed and painted bright-hued and erotically suggestive objects, some of which were included by curator Marcia Tucker in the 1973 Whitney Biennial.[3] From 1977, Kruger worked with her own architectural photographs, publishing an artist's book, "Picture/Readings", in 1979.[6]
Artistic practice
Addressing issues of language and sign, Kruger has often been grouped with such feminist postmodern artists which she was interleaved by Jenny Holzer, Sherrie Levine, Martha Rosler, and Cindy Sherman.[6] Like Holzer and Sherman, in particular, she uses the techniques of mass communication and advertising to explore gender and identity.[7] Kruger is considered to be part of the Pictures Generation.[8]
Imagery and text
Much of Kruger's work engages the merging of found photographs from existing sources with pithy and aggressive text that involves the viewer in the struggle for power and control that her captions speak to. She develops her ideas on a computer, later transferring the results to often billboard-sized images.[3] In their trademark white letters against a slash of red background, some of her instantly recognizable slogans read “I shop therefore I am,” and “Your body is a battleground." Much of her text questions the viewer about feminism, consumerism, and individual autonomy and desire, although her black-and-white images are culled from the mainstream magazines that sell the very ideas she is disputing.
Kruger juxtaposes her imagery and text containing criticism of sexism and the circulation of power within cultures is a recurring motif in Kruger's work. The text in her works of the 1980s includes such phrases as "Your comfort is my silence" (1981), "You invest in the divinity of the masterpiece" (1982), and "I shop therefore I am" (1987). She has said that "I work with pictures and words because they have the ability to determine who we are and who we aren’t."[9] A larger category that threads through her work is the appropriation and alteration of existing images. The importance of appropriation art in contemporary culture lay in its ability to play with preponderant imagistic and textual conventions: to mash up meanings and create new ones. Her poster for the 1989 Women's March on Washington in support of legal abortion included a woman's face bisected into positive and negative photographic reproductions, accompanied by the text "Your Body is a battleground."[3] In describing her use of appropriation, Kruger states:Pictures and words seem to become the rallying points for certain assumptions. There are assumptions of truth and falsity and I guess the narratives of falsity are called fictions. I replicate certain words and watch them stray from or coincide with the notions of fact and fiction.[10]
Kruger's early monochrome pre-digital works, known as ‘paste ups’, reveal the influence of the artist’s experience as a magazine editorial designer during her early career. These small scale works, the largest of which is 11 x 13 inches, are composed of altered found images, and texts either culled from the media or invented by the artist. A negative of each work was then produced and used to make enlarged versions of these initial ‘paste ups’.[11] Between 1978 and 1979, she completed "Picture/Readings," simple photographs of modest houses alternating with panels of words.[3] From 1992 on, Kruger designed several magazine covers, such as Ms., Esquire, Newsweek, and The New Republic.[12]
In 1990, Kruger scandalized the Japanese American community of Little Tokyo, Los Angeles, with her proposal to paint the Pledge of Allegiance, bordered by provocative questions, on the side of a warehouse in the heart of the historic downtown neighborhood.[3] Kruger had been commissioned by MOCA to paint a mural for "A Forest of Signs: Art in the Crisis of Representation," an 1989 exhibition that also included works by Barbara Bloom, Jenny Holzer, Jeff Koons, Sherrie Levine, and Richard Prince. But before the mural went up, Kruger herself and curator Ann Goldstein presented it at various community meetings over the course 18 months.[13] Only after protests the artist offered to eliminate the pledge from her mural proposal, while still retaining a series of questions painted in the colors and format of the American flag: "Who is bought and sold? Who is beyond the law? Who is free to choose? Who follows orders? Who salutes longest? Who prays loudest? Who dies first? Who laughs last?".[3] A full year after the exhibition closed, Kruger's reconfigured mural finally went up for a two-year run.[13]
In 1994, Kruger's L'empathie peut changer le monde (Empathy can change the world) was installed on a train station platform in Strasbourg, France. One year later, with architects Henry Smith-Miller and Laurie Hawkinson and landscape architect Nicholas Quennell, she designed the 200-foot-long sculptural letters Picture This for a stage and outdoor amphitheater at the North Carolina Museum of Art, Raleigh.[3] Between 1998 and 2008, she created permanent installations for the Fisher College of Business, the Broad Contemporary Art Museum at LACMA, the Moderna Museet, Stockholm, and the Price Center at the University of California, San Diego.[14] For a site-specific piece that she produced at the Parrish Art Museum in 1998, Kruger placed across the upper range of the museum's Romanesque facade stark red letters that read, "You belong here"; below, on columns separating three arched entry portals, stacked letters spelled "Money" and "Taste."[15] As part of the Venice Biennale in 2005, Kruger installed a digitally printed vinyl mural across the entire facade of the Italian pavilion, thereby dividing it into three parts—green at the left, red at the right, white in between. In English and Italian, the words "money" and "power" climbed the portico's columns; the left wall said, "Pretend things are going as planned," while "God is on my side; he told me so" fills the right.[16] In 2012, her installation Belief+Doubt, which covers 6,700 square feet of surface area and was been printed onto wallpaper-like sheets in the artist's signature colors of red, black and white, was installed at the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden.[17]
Other works
Since the mid-1990s, Kruger has created large-scale immersive video and audio installations. Enveloping the viewer with the seductions of direct address, the work continues her questioning of power, control, affection and contempt: still images now move and speak and spatialize their commentary.[18] In 1997, Kruger produced a series of fiberglass sculptures of compromised celebrities, including John F. and Robert Kennedy hoisting Marilyn Monroe on their shoulders.[3] For a concurrent show that same year in New York, she had city buses wrapped with quotations from figures such as Malcolm X, Courtney Love, and H.L. Mencken. For her first retrospective, at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, she created 15 billboards and countless wild postings, executed and installed in both English and Spanish.[3] For a public awareness campaign to promote arts instruction in the Los Angeles Unified School District, Kruger covered a bus with phrases like “Give your brain as much attention as you do your hair and you’ll be a thousand times better off”; “from here to there”; “Don’t be a jerk”; and “You want it. You buy it. You forget it.”[19]
Teaching
Kruger has taught at the Independent Study Program at the Whitney Museum; California Institute of the Arts, Valencia; University of California, Berkeley; Chicago; and UCSD for five years before joining the faculty at the University of California at Los Angeles. In 1995–96, she was artist in residence at the Wexner Center for the Arts, where she created Public Service Announcements addressing issues of domestic violence.[20] In 2000, she was the Wiegand Foundation Artist in Residence at Scripps College, Claremont.[21] She has written about television, film and culture for Artforum, Esquire, The New York Times, and The Village Voice.
Exhibitions
In 1979, Barbara Kruger exhibited her first works combining appropriated photographs and fragments of superimposed text at P.S. 1 Contemporary Art Center, in Long Island City, Queens. Her first institutional show was staged in London, when Iwona Blazwick decided to exhibit her work at the Institute of Contemporary Arts in 1983.[22] In 1999, the Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles mounted the first retrospective exhibition to provide a comprehensive overview of Kruger's career since 1978, which travelled to the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York in 2000.[23] Kruger has since been the subject of many one-person exhibitions, including shows organized by the Institute of Contemporary Arts in London (1983); the Musée d'art contemporain de Montréal (1985); Serpentine Gallery in London (1994); Palazzo delle Papesse Centro Arte Contemporanea in Siena (2002); Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego (2005); and Moderna Museet in Stockholm (2008). In 2009, Kruger was included in the seminal show "The Pictures Generation, 1974–1984" at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Kruger has also participated in the Whitney Biennial (1983, 1985, and 1987) and Documenta 7 and 8 (1982 and 1987). She represented the United States at the Venice Biennale in 1982 and again participated in 2005, when she received the Leone d'Oro for lifetime achievement.
In 2007, Kruger was one of the many artists to be a part of South Korea's Incheon Women Artists' Biennale in Seoul. This marked South Korea's first women's biennial.[24] That same year, she designed "Consider This...", an exhibition at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art.[25] In September 2009, Kruger’s Between Being Born and Dying, a major installation commissioned by the Lever House Art Collection, opened at the New York City architectural landmark Lever House. In 2012, as a member of the board of the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles (MOCA), Kruger volunteered to be the lead funder of the museum's scholarly exhibit Ends of the Earth: Land Art to 1974 and to create a new work on vinyl to sell with proceeds going entirely toward the show's $1 million budget.[26]
Kruger's words and pictures have been displayed in both galleries and public spaces, as well as framed and unframed photographs, posters, postcards, t-shirts, electronic signboards, façade banners, and billboards.
Recognition
Kruger was awarded the MOCA Award to Distinguished Women in the Arts in 2001. In 2005, she was included in The Experience of Art at the Venice Biennale and was the recipient of the Leone d'Oro for lifetime achievement. At the 10th anniversary Gala in the Garden at the Hammer Museum in 2012, Kruger was honored by TV presenter Rachel Maddow.[27]
Art market
Kruger's first dealer was Gagosian Gallery, with which she did two shows in Los Angeles in the early 1980s.[22] In 1988, she was the first woman to join the prominent contemporary art gallery of Mary Boone[28] and has had eight solo shows there since. Kruger is also represented by Rhona Hoffman Gallery, Chicago; Yvon Lambert, Paris; and Sprüth Magers Berlin London and L&M Arts in Los Angeles. In late 2011, her 1985 photo of a ventriloquist's dummy, Untitled (When I Hear the Word Culture I Take Out My Checkbook) (alluding to the phrase "when I hear the word culture, I reach for my gun" in Hanns Johst's play Schlageter), was sold at Christie's for a record $902,500.[17]
Books
- My Pretty Pony, text by Stephen King (1988), Library Fellows of the Whitney Museum of American Art
- Barbara Kruger: 7 January to 28 January 1989 by Barbara Kruger, Mary Boone Gallery, 1989
- Barbara Kruger: 5 January to 26 January 1991, by Barbara Kruger, 1991
- Remote Control: Power, Cultures, and the World of Appearances by Barbara Kruger, 1994
- Love for Sale, by Kate Linker, 1996
- Remaking History (Discussions in Contemporary Culture, No 4) by Barbara Kruger, 1998
- Thinking of You, 1999 (The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles)
- Barbara Kruger, by Angela Vettese, 2002
- Money Talks by Barbara Kruger and Lisa Phillips, 2005
- Barbara Kruger by Barbara Kruger, Rizzoli 2010
Film and video
- "The Globe Shrinks". 2010
- "Pleasure, Pain, Desire, Disgust". 1997
- "Twelve". 2004
- Bulls on Parade video clip, Rage Against The Machine (1996)
- "Art in the Twenty-First Century". 2001
- "Cinefile: Reel Women". 1995
See also
- Feminist art movement in the United States
- Jenny Holzer
- Cindy Sherman
- Joel Wachs, Los Angeles City Council member who helped Kruger get permission for an outdoor art piece
References
- ↑ , Hyman, Paula E., Moore, Beborah Dash. 1998. Jewish Women in America. An Historical Encyclopedia. New York, NY: Routledge. Sponsored by The American Jewish Historical Society. ISBN 0-415-91934-7. (from page 764)
- ↑ , Dashkin, Michael. „Barbara Kruger, b. 1945.“ Jewish Women’s Archive. Jewish Women a Comprehensive Historical Encyclopedia [online] [cite 3. 3. 2013].
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 3.7 3.8 3.9 Hunter Drohojowska-Philp (October 17, 1999), She Has a Way With Words Los Angeles Times.
- ↑ Witzling , Mara Rose. "+weequahic Voicing today's visions:writings by contemporary women artists, p. 265. Universe, 1994. ISBN 0-87663-640-7. Accessed March 5, 2012. "Barbara Kruger B. 1945... "
- ↑ http://www.barbarakruger.com/biography.shtml
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 Barbara Kruger, Untitled (When I hear the word culture I take out my checkbook) (1985) Christie's Evening Sale of Works from the Peter Norton Collection, 8 November 2011, New York.
- ↑ Read My Lips: Jenny Holzer, Barbara Kruger, Cindy Sherman, June 6 - August 9, 1998 National Gallery of Australia.
- ↑ Douglas Eklund, Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History: The Pictures Generation Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.
- ↑ Barbara Kruger: Circus, December 15, 2010 - January 30, 2011 Kunsthalle Schirn, Frankfurt.
- ↑ Kruger, Barbara & Richard Prince. "Interview with Barbara Kruger and Richard Prince", BOMB Magazine, Spring, 1982
- ↑ Barbara Kruger: Paste Up, November 21, 2009 - January 23, 2010, Sprüth Magers Gallery, London.
- ↑ Charles Hagen (June 14, 1992), Barbara Kruger: Cover Girl New York Times.
- ↑ 13.0 13.1 Christopher Knight (December 14, 2010), MOCA's mural mess Los Angeles Times.
- ↑ Barbara Kruger: Another, 2008 University of California, San Diego.
- ↑ Ken Johnson (August 6, 2004), The Hamptons, A Playground For Creativity New York Times.
- ↑ Christopher Knight (June 21, 2005), Fueled by politics Los Angeles Times.
- ↑ 17.0 17.1 Kelly Crow (August 2, 2012), An Artist Has Her Say—All Over a Museum's Lobby and Store Wall Street Journal.
- ↑ Barbara Kruger: The Globe Shrinks, September, 3 - October 23, 2010, Sprüth Magers Gallery, Berlin.
- ↑ Howard Blume (October 8, 2012), Campaign launched to promote arts education in L.A. Unified Los Angeles Times.
- ↑ Wexner Center Residency Awards Wexner Center for the Arts.
- ↑ Barbara Kruger to be Wiegand Foundation Artist in Residence at Scripps Scripps College, Claremont.
- ↑ 22.0 22.1 Caroline Roux (May 9, 2011), Barbara Kruger: Slogans that shake society The Independent.
- ↑ Barbara Kruger, October 17, 1999 - February 13, 2000 Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles.
- ↑ South Korea Kicks off First Women's Biennial, ARTINFO, November 6, 2007, retrieved 2008-04-16
- ↑ Consider This..., April 9, 2006–January 15, 2007 LACMA
- ↑ Mike Boehm (March 28, 2012), MOCA bets on festival's star power Los Angeles Times.
- ↑ Julie Miller (October 7, 2012), Steve Martin and Rachel Maddow Toast World-Renowned Artists at the Hammer Museum; Katy Perry Toasts Nail Art Vanity Fair.
- ↑ Dorothy Spears (August 24, 2010), Resurgent Agitprop in Capital Letters New York Times.
Literature
- Heyd, Milly. 1999. Mutual Reflections: Jews and Blacks in American Art. New Brunswick, New Jersey: Rutgers University Press. ISBN 0-8135-2618-3.
- Hyman, Paula E., Moore, Beborah Dash. 1998. Jewish Women in America. An Historical Encyclopedia. New York, NY: Routledge. Sponsored by The American Jewish Historical Society. ISBN 0-415-91934-7.
- Janson, H.W., Janson, Anthony F. History of Art. Harry N. Abrams, Inc., Publishers. 6 edition. January 1, 2005. ISBN 0-13-182895-9
- Kruger, Barbara. 1982. „“Taking“ Pictures.“ Screen 23 (2): 90-96.
- Linker, Kate. Love For Sale: Words and Pictures of Barbara Kruger. New York: Harry N. Abrams Inc., 1996.
- Femme brut(e), [exhibition catalogue] New London: Lyman Allyn Art Museum, 2006.
- “Barbara Kruger” ACCA Education Kit. Australian Centre for Contemporary Art. http://www.accaonline.org.au/Assets/12/1/BarbaraKrugeredkit-1.pdf
- Rankin, Aimee. 1987. „“Difference“ and Deference.“ Screen 11 (2): 91-101.
External links
- Biography, interviews, essays, artwork images and video clips from PBS series Art:21 -- Art in the Twenty-First Century - Season 1 (2001).
- Barbara Kruger at the Museum of Modern Art
- A fan website, barbarakruger.com
- Kruger collection at the Broad Art Foundation
- A criticism page, with images
- Venice Biennale Awards Kruger
- Current exhibitions and connection to galeries at Artfacts.Net
- SWINDLE Magazine Interview
- BOMB Magazine Interview with Barbara Kruger and Richard Prince (Spring, 1982)
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