"WHY PICTURES NOW"Louise Lawler
presented by the gallery :

METRO PICTURES
519 West 24th Street New York, NY 10011
T 212 206 7100 e-mail:

MoMA The Museum of Modern Art
11 West 53 Street, Manhattan New York NY
T (212) 708-9400 email :
April 30 > July 30, 2017
![]() Louise Lawler. (Andy Warhol and Other Artists) Tulip. 1982. Silver dye bleach print, 38 1/2 × 60 1/2" (97.8 × 153.7 cm). Courtesy the artist and Metro Pictures, New York. © 2017 Louise Lawler |
![]() Louise Lawler. Monogram. 1984. Silver dye bleach print, 39 1/2 × 28" (100.3 × 71.1 cm). Courtesy the artist and Metro Pictures, New York. © 2017 Louise Lawler |
![]() Louise Lawler. Does Andy Warhol Make You Cry? 1988. Silver dye bleach print with text on Plexiglass wall label, image (shown): 27 1/4 × 39" (69.2 × 99.1 cm); label: 4 3/8 × 6 3/8" (11.1 × 16.2 cm). The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Gift of Gabriella de Ferrari in honor of Karen Davidson. © 2017 Louise Lawler |
![]() Louise Lawler. Untitled (Salon Hodler). 1992. Paperweight (silver dye bleach print, crystal, felt) with text on wall, paperweight: 2" (5.1 cm) high, 3 1/2" (8.9 cm) diam. Courtesy the artist and Metro Pictures, New York. © 2017 Louise Lawler |
WHY PICTURES NOW, the first New York museum survey of the work of American artist Louise Lawler, is an exploration of her creative output, which has inspired fellow artists and cultural thinkers alike for the past four decades. The exhibition consists of a sequence of mural-scale, “adjusted to fit” images set in dynamic relation to non-linear groupings of photographs—of collectors’ homes, auction houses, and museum installations—distinctive of Lawler’s conceptual exercises. Additionally, a deceptively empty space presents black-and-white tracings of Lawler’s photographs that have been printed on vinyl and mounted directly to the wall. A display of the artist’s ephemera from the 1970s to today highlights the feminist and performative undercurrents of her art. The defiant, utterly quizzical sound piece Birdcalls (1972/81), for which the artist turned the names of well-known male artists into bird-like squawks and twitters, will be installed in the Museum’s Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Sculpture Garden. In foregrounding her work’s relationship to the economies of collaboration and exchange, Lawler shifts focus from the individual picture to the broader history of art. Her careful attention to artistic contexts, modes of presentation, and viewers’ receptions generates witty, affective situations that contribute to institutional transformation.
Among the most intriguing aspects of Lawler’s working process is her continuous re-presentation, reframing, or restaging in the present, a strategy through which she revisits her own images by transferring them to different formats—from photographs to paperweights, tracings, and works she calls “adjusted to fit” (images stretched or expanded to fit the location of their display). Lawler’s critical strategies of reformatting existing content not only suggest the idea that pictures can have more than one life, but underpin the intentional, relational character of her farsighted art.
Among the most intriguing aspects of Lawler’s working process is her continuous re-presentation, reframing, or restaging in the present, a strategy through which she revisits her own images by transferring them to different formats—from photographs to paperweights, tracings, and works she calls “adjusted to fit” (images stretched or expanded to fit the location of their display). Lawler’s critical strategies of reformatting existing content not only suggest the idea that pictures can have more than one life, but underpin the intentional, relational character of her farsighted art.




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Wednesday, April 26,
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Open seven days a week
Open until 8:00 p.m. on Fridays
Member Early Hours begin at 9:30 a.m.
Adults $25
Seniors 65 and over with ID $18
Students Full-time with ID $14
Children 16 and under Free
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