JULIE MEHRETU AT WHITE CUBE BERMONDSEY
Liminal Squared
1 May 2013 - 7 July 2013
JULIE MEHRETU AT WHITE CUBE BERMONDSEY
Liminal Squared
1 May 2013 - 7 July 2013
South Galleries, Bermondsey
‘’ I am
interested in the multifaceted layers of place, space, and time that impact the
formation of personal and communal identity ’’
White Cube Bermondsey is pleased to present an
exhibition by Julie Mehretu. This is Mehretu's first major solo exhibition in
London and will feature new and recent paintings, some of which will be
presented within a specially constructed environment designed by David Adjaye
in close collaboration with the artist. Described by curator Douglas Fogle as
‘perfect metaphors for the increasingly interconnected and complex character of
the 21st century’, Mehretu's large-scale paintings, which are built up in
layers, employ a broad lexicon of drawing techniques together with a precise,
muscular abstraction to investigate the intersection of politics, architecture
and history and the way these forces shape the formation of our social identity.
This exhibition, which features five new works,
centres around ‘Mogamma: A Painting in Four Parts’, the collective name for
four monumental canvases that were recently included in dOCUMENTA (13). The
‘Mogamma’ works, which were completed in 2012 shortly after the time of the
Arab Spring revolutions, have evolved out of Mehretu's investigations into how
architecture and geographical space, particularly within urban centres, become
sites for political and mythological projection. ‘I think architecture reflects
the machinations of politics, and that's why I am interested in it as a
metaphor for those institutions. I don't think of architectural language as
just a metaphor about space, but about spaces of power, about ideas of power’,
Mehretu explains.
The title of these works relates to 'Al-Mogamma', the
name of the all purpose government building in Tahrir Square, Cairo which was
both instrumental in the 2011 revolution and architecturally symptomatic of
Egypt's post-colonial past. The word 'Mogamma', however, means 'collective' in
Arabic and historically, has been used to refer to a place that shares a
mosque, a synagogue and a church and is a place of multi faith.
In the ‘Mogamma’ paintings, Mehretu has overlaid
hundreds of images taken from different squares around the globe – symbolically
weighted urban centres that have become nexus points for upheaval and
revolution – and combined them with single blocks, lines and arcs of bold
acrylic colour. The works, which contain a complex web of mark making and
visual narrative, point to a reading of the built environment in our
post-colonial condition, where the language and motifs of architecture always
contain the metaphors for its own entropy and the fractured history of past
conflict.
Likewise, in the work 'Aether (Venice)' (2011), a
mass of architectural geometries of fragmented parts of the city create a
dense, broken grid over which sparse single vectors or lines have been painted.
Creating the effect of a momentary vision, where structures appear and then
recede before the eye, the painting creates the vertiginous feeling of
glimpsing, cross-section, through history and is mimetic of the chaotic nature
of contemporary urban experience.
Mehretu's process is one of revealing and occlusion,
of erasing selected areas of drawings and marks to produce what has been
described as an effect of ‘allegorical obliteration’. These moments of
determined erasure have been pushed to spectacular effect in recent works where
sections of drawing and painting create areas of blurring that appear like
cloud-like miasmas or explosions on the surface of the work. As Brian Dillon
has recently noted about Mehretu's work, ‘...the paintings seem now more than
ever to contain, in their increasingly atomised and aerated surfaces, the seeds
of an as-yet-unfulfilled (and perhaps unrecoverable) future.’ (2)
An exhibition of Mehretu's new paintings will run
concurrently at Marian Goodman Gallery, New York. A catalogue for ‘Liminal Squared’,
with colour reproductions and essays by TJ Demos and Tacita Dean, will be
published this summer on the occasion of the joint exhibitions.
MOGAMMA : PART
2 - 2012
Dimensions: 457.2 x 365.8 cm
Ink and Acrylic on Canvas
Photo: Ben Westoby
Dimensions: 457.2 x 365.8 cm
Ink and Acrylic on Canvas
Photo: Ben Westoby
© 2013 White Cube
MOGAMMA : PART 2 - 2012 ( DETAIL )
MOGAMMA : PART
3 - 2012
Dimensions: 457.2 x 365.8 cm
Ink and Acrylic on Canvas
Photo: Ben Westoby
Dimensions: 457.2 x 365.8 cm
Ink and Acrylic on Canvas
Photo: Ben Westoby
© 2013 White Cube
MOGAMMA : PART 3 - 2012 ( DETAIL )
MOGAMMA : PART
4 - 2012
Dimensions: 457.2 x 365.8 cm
Ink and Acrylic on Canvas
Photo: Ben Westoby
Dimensions: 457.2 x 365.8 cm
Ink and Acrylic on Canvas
Photo: Ben Westoby
© 2013 White Cube
MOGAMMA : PART 4 - 2012 ( DETAIL )
A
A
A
KABUL 2013
Dimensions: 243.8 x 365.8 cm
Graphite and Acrylic on Canvas
Photo: Ben Westoby
Dimensions: 243.8 x 365.8 cm
Graphite and Acrylic on Canvas
Photo: Ben Westoby
© 2013 White Cube
KABUL 2013 ( DETAIL )
INVISIBLE SUN
(ALGORITHM 2) 2013
Dimensions: 304.8 x 426.7 cm
Ink and Acrylic on Canvas
Photo: Tom Powel Imaging
Dimensions: 304.8 x 426.7 cm
Ink and Acrylic on Canvas
Photo: Tom Powel Imaging
© 2013 White Cube
INVISIBLE SUN (ALGORITHM 2) 2013 ( DETAIL )
A
A
BEING HIGHER
II - 2013
Dimensions: 213.4 x 152.4 cm
Ink and Acrylic on Canvas
Photo: Tom Powel Imaging
Dimensions: 213.4 x 152.4 cm
Ink and Acrylic on Canvas
Photo: Tom Powel Imaging
© 2013 White Cube
BEING HIGHER II - 2013 ( DETAIL )
BEING HIGHER I - 2013
Dimensions: 213.4 x 152.4 cm
Ink and Acrylic on Canvas
Photo: Tom Powel Imaging
Dimensions: 213.4 x 152.4 cm
Ink and Acrylic on Canvas
Photo: Tom Powel Imaging
© 2013 White Cube
BEING HIGHER I - 2013 ( DETAIL )
A
INVISIBLE LINE (COLLECTIVE) - 2010-2011
Dimensions: 347.3 x 758.8 x 5 cm
Ink and Acrylic on Canvas
Dimensions: 347.3 x 758.8 x 5 cm
Ink and Acrylic on Canvas
© 2013 White Cube
INVISIBLE LINE (COLLECTIVE) - 2010-2011 (DETAIL)
A
AETHER VENICE 2011
AETHER VENICE 2011 ( DETAIL )
A
EMERGENT
ALGORITHM (KABUL) 2013
Dimensions: 149.2 x 223.5 cm
Ink and Acrylic on Linen
Dimensions: 149.2 x 223.5 cm
Ink and Acrylic on Linen
© 2013 White Cube
EMERGENT ALGORITHM (KABUL) 2013 ( DETAIL )
UNTITLED 2013
Dimensions: Five etchings, each: 83.4 x 98.7 cm (framed)
Set of Five Etchings
Photo: Edouard Fraipont
Dimensions: Five etchings, each: 83.4 x 98.7 cm (framed)
Set of Five Etchings
Photo: Edouard Fraipont
© 2013 White Cube
WHITE CUBE
JULIE MEHRETU
Julie Mehretu was
born in 1970 in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia and lives and works in New York and
Berlin. She has participated in numerous international exhibitions and
biennials and has received international recognition for her work, including,
in 2005, the American Art Award from the Whitney Museum of American Art, New
York and the prestigious MacArthur Fellows award. Solo exhibitions include,
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York (2010); Deutsche Guggenheim, Berlin
(2009); North Carolina Museum of Art, Raleigh (2008); Detroit Institute of Art
(2007); Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Humlebaek, Denmark (2007); MUSAC, Léon,
Spain (2006); St Louis Art Museum (2005); Walker Art Center, Minneapolis,
REDCAT, Los Angeles and Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo (2003).
1.Julie Mehretu
quoted in 'Putting the World into the World' by Douglas Fogle, in Julie
Mehretu: Drawing into Painting, ed. Fogle / Ilesanmi,. Minneapolis: Walker Art
Center, 2003).
2.Brian Dillon, 'An Archaeology of the Air' in Julie Mehretu: Grey Area, Deutsche
Guggenheim exhibition catalogue, New York: Guggenheim Museum Publications,
2009.