Sunday, February 6th, 2011

First U.S. Solo Museum Show of Gabriel Kuri at the Institute of Contemporary Art in Boston

February 3, 2011 by All Art News  
Filed under Art Events & Exhibitions

BOSTON, MA.- On Feb. 2, 2011, the Institute of Contemporary Art/Boston opens Gabriel Kuri: Nobody needs to know the price of your Saab, the first solo museum exhibition of the artist’s work in the U.S. Using familiar materials such as receipts, newspaper or plastic bags, Kuri focuses our attention on contemporary consumer culture and the way money mediates almost all our human relationships and daily transactions. Approximately 25 sculptures and 10 collages will be on view, including Untitled (Superama), one of three towering tapestries ranging from 8 to over 12 feet in height, each intricately hand-woven in Mexico to replicate Wal-mart receipts. Accompanied by a fully- illustrated catalogue, the exhibition is on view at the ICA through July 4, 2011. Gabriel Kuri: Nobody needs to know the price of your Saab is organized by the Blaffer Art Museum at the University of Houston.

Gabriel Kuri Untitled Diario económico detail 2004 580x388 First U.S. Solo Museum Show of Gabriel Kuri at the Institute of Contemporary Art in Boston
Gabriel Kuri, Untitled (Diario económico) (detail), 2004, Trestle table, tarpaulin, damp moss, damp newspaper, 60 x 54 1/4 x 31 1/2 inches, Courtesy of the artist and kurimanzutto, Mexico City.

“Gabriel Kuri’s sculptures and photographs capture daily rituals, commerce, and how the passage and marks of time are reflected in overlooked objects,” said Jill Medvedow, director of the ICA. “Along with Dr. Lakra and Damián Ortega—whose work we recently introduced at the ICA—Kuri was part of an informal collective of brilliant artists that gathered at the Mexico City studio of sculptor Gabriel Orozco. This exhibition provides Boston audiences the opportunity to discover yet another powerful voice from this hub of artistic innovation.”

“What we see as merely the residue of daily life—receipts, crushed cans, slivers of soap—Gabriel Kuri sees as the stuff of sculpture, objects that track our movements through systems of economics, politics, consumption, and production,” said ICA Associate Curator Randi Hopkins, who coordinated the exhibition at the ICA.

Alternatively described as a “unique accountant” and a “poetic activist,” Kuri raises questions about the ways we represent information and the objects to which we assign value. A conventional, color-coded pie chart is re-imagined as a series of three-dimensional, interlocking bins, literally stuffed with the materials it has been created to quantify. Disposable items are recast as bits of personal biography, as Kuri transforms rows of tiny hotel shampoo bottles into a visual tally of time spent on the road. Other works explore the relationship between consumerism and the art world, such as a lowly grocery store receipt elevated into an exquisite, hand-woven tapestry of monumental scale. In the artist’s hands, works that borrow from the quantifying languages of charts, graphs, and numbers seem to become sentimental measures of time, space, and memory.

Gabriel Kuri was born in Mexico in 1970, and studied at Escuela Nacional de Artes Plásticas, Mexico City, and Goldsmiths College of Art, London. Kuri gained international recognition as part of a circle of influential artists—including Abraham Cruzvillegas, Dr. Lakra, and Damián Ortega—who met regularly in the Mexico City studio of Gabriel Orozco in the late 80s and early 90s. Recent solo shows include Gabriel Kuri: Soft Information in Your Hard Facts at Museion, Bolzano (2010) and Join the Dots and Make a Point at Kunstverein Freiburg, Freiburg and Bielefelder Kunstverein, Bielefeld (2010). He has contributed to numerous international group shows, including the 5th Berlin Biennal in 2008; Brave New Worlds, Colección Jumex, Ecatepec, Mexico, 2008, and Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, 2007; and Unmonumental, New Museum, New York, 2007. Organized by the Blaffer Art Museum at the University of Houston, Gabriel Kuri: Nobody needs to know the price of your Saab is the artist’s first solo museum exhibition in the U.S. Kuri lives and works in Mexico City, Mexico and Brussels, Belgium.

Related posts:

  1. The Institute of Contemporary Art/Boston Announces Two New Curatorial Appointments
  2. Institute of Contemporary Art/Boston Appoints New Chief Curator
  3. Retrospective of the Leading Mexican Artist Gabriel Orozco on Display at Tate Modern
  4. First Solo Museum Exhibition of the Work of Brian Donnelly, a.k.a. KAWS Opens at the Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum
  5. MFA, Boston Appoints Jen Mergel as Senior Curator of Contemporary Art

Speak Your Mind

Tell us what you're thinking...
and oh, if you want a pic to show with your comment, go get a gravatar!