Art ExhibitionsArt News

Sol LeWitt. Wall Drawings from 1968 to 2007 at Centre Pompidou-Metz‏

Sol LeWitt, Wall Drawing #346. Seven geometric figures (including right  triangle) drawn with India ink. The figures are filled in solid. India ink.  First drawn by: Sol LeWitt, Guy Mazarguil, Laurent Mazarguil.  First installation: Galerie Yvon Lambert, Paris, February 1981.  Centre Pompidou, Musée national d'art moderne, Paris. Achat en 1982.  © Adagp, Paris 2012 . © Centre Pompidou-Metz / Photos: Rémi Villaggi

Exhibition # 5

Sol LeWitt.
Wall Drawings from 1968 to 2007
7 March 2012–29 July 2013

Centre Pompidou-Metz
1, parvis des Droits-de-l’Homme
CS 90490
57020 Metz Cedex 1, France

www.centrepompidou-metz.fr

Centre Pompidou-Metz presents the largest retrospective ever shown in Europe of Sol LeWitt wall drawings.

Conceived in close collaboration with the LeWitt Collection (Chester, Connecticut), the exhibition at Centre Pompidou-Metz features thirty-three black-and-white works spanning the artist’s entire career. The retrospective reflects both the extraordinary consistency of LeWitt’s systematic explorations and the remarkable diversity of his revolutionary practice.

The American conceptual artist (1928–2007) created some 1200 wall drawings between 1968 and 2007, developing mainly serial and modular systems through a vocabulary of abstract geometric forms. The first wall drawings explore in pencil combinations of straight lines in four directions, a form LeWitt would return to throughout his career. He then progressively introduced numerous variations: not straight lines, broken lines, grids; simple figures: arcs, circles, triangles, etc. and complex figures, loops, pyramids and “forms derived from a cube”. From pencil and crayon to India ink, acrylic paint, and graphite, the variety of materials used by LeWitt is equally demonstrated throughout the exhibition.

The making of the wall drawings at Centre Pompidou-Metz has been the occasion of an exceptional collaboration with professional drafters trained by the LeWitt studio, local artists, and more than 60 students from local art and architecture schools.

Curator:
Béatrice Gross, New York

Exhibition Design:
Cécile Degos, Paris

Sol LeWitt. Colors
June 21 to October 14, 2012

In partnership with the Centre Pompidou-Metz, M-Museum in Leuven (Belgium) presents a chromatic counterpart to the retrospective in black and white, which features over twenty wall drawings in color.

Curators: Eva Wittocx (Chief-Curator, M-Museum) and Béatrice Gross (Independent curator, New York) www.mleuven.be

MONO
June 1 to September 2, 2012

Sol LeWitt. Wall Drawings from 1968 to 2007 is also part of a cross-boarder initiative entitled MONO. Simultaneously presenting solo shows by contemporary artists, MONO unites fifteen modern and contemporary art venues in Luxembourg, Lorraine (France) and Saarland (Germany).

Save the date. Upcoming exhibitions

1917
May 26–September 24, 2012
This exhibition addresses the theme of artistic creation in wartime.

1917 stands out for the extreme diversity of its artistic production. The exhibition sets out to convey this diversity by mapping the various positions of the artists relative to the battlefront. Taking their place alongside the masters are the amateur artists who felt the need to respond to the trials of war through creative expression such as trench art.

As one of the highlights, 1917 presents, in an exceptional staging, Picasso’s largest work: the stage curtain for the ballet Parade, last shown in 2004 in Hong Kong and its first showing in France in over twenty years.

Curators:
Claire Garnier, Curator, Centre Pompidou-Metz
Laurent Le Bon, Curator, Director of the Centre Pompidou-Metz

In 2013, the Centre Pompidou-Metz is organizing a second exhibition dedicated to LeWitt, this time featuring an unprecedented ensemble culled from his personal collection including over 250 artworks and documents by LeWitt and numerous other artists. Centre Pompidou-Metz’ two-fold project will thus reflect LeWitt’s extraordinary career not only as a prolific artist but also as an insatiable collector.