Friday, August 26th, 2011

The Guggenheim Acquires Three Seminal Works by Artist, Philosopher, and Poet Lee Ufan.

June 19, 2011 by  
Filed under Museums & Galleries

NEW YORK, NY.- The Guggenheim Museum recently acquired three seminal works by artist, philosopher, and poet Lee Ufan. The two sculptures and one painting come into the collection on the eve of this summer’s retrospective Lee Ufan: Marking Infinity and are generous gifts of Lisson Gallery, London; Kukje Gallery, Seoul; Blum & Poe, Los Angeles; and The Pace Gallery, New York, in honor of the artist.

Active in Korea, Japan, and France since the 1960s, Lee’s creation of a visual, conceptual, and theoretical terrain has radically expanded the possibilities for Post-Minimalist painting and sculpture. Lee’s innovative body of work revolves around the notion of encounter—seeing the bare existence of what is actually before us and focusing on “the world as it is.” Lee rose to prominence in the late 1960s as the leading theorist and practitioner of Mono-ha (School of Things), a Japanese art movement that developed from the collapse of colonial world orders, antiauthoritarian protests, and the rise of modernity critiques.

Lee Ufan Dialogue 2010 580x388 The Guggenheim Acquires Three Seminal Works by Artist, Philosopher, and Poet Lee Ufan.
Lee Ufan, Dialogue, 2010. Oil and mineral pigment on canvas, 227 x 182 cm. Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, Gift of The Pace Gallery, New York, and Blum & Poe, Los Angeles, in honor of Lee Ufan, 2011. Photo: Norihiro Ueno, courtesy The Pace Gallery, New York, and Blum & Poe, Los Angeles.

Lee’s sculptures, presenting dispersed arrangements of stones together with industrial materials like steel plates, rubber sheets, and glass panes, recast the discrete object as a network of relations based on parity between the viewer, materials, and site. The newly acquired works of steel and stone, Relatum—dialogue (2002/11) and Relatum—dissonance (2009), are exceptional examples of Lee’s sculptural oeuvre. Dialogue (2010) is part of an eponymous series of paintings exploring the relationship between the confines of the painting itself and the space beyond.

Alexandra Munroe, Samsung Senior Curator of Asian Art at the Guggenheim and the curator of Lee Ufan: Marking Infinity, said of the gifts: “It is always particularly meaningful to acquire works directly from a Guggenheim exhibition. These works will become a greater part of our curatorial identity as a museum, expanding our rich holdings of Post-Minimalist art with a fresh critical perspective.”

Related posts:

  1. Oklahoma City Museum of Art Acquires Two Works by Renowned American Artist Anne Truitt
  2. SFMOMA Acquires Conceptual Art Collection with Works by Bruce Nauman
  3. Art Gallery in Australia Announces Exhibition of Works from Guggenheim
  4. Von Lintel Gallery Present an Exhibition of Paintings by Chinese Artist and Philosopher Zou Cao
  5. Hammer Exhibits Seminal and Rarely Seen Paintings by Legendary Artist Eva Hesse

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