Nicole Eisenman: Al-ugh-ories
The New Museum will present the first New York survey show of the work of Nicole Eisenman (b. 1965, Verdun, France).
This show will mark the first New York museum survey exhibition of Eisenman’s work and will provide an in-depth look at the symbolic nature of the artist’s most striking depictions of individuals and groups—from intimate portraits to more complex narrative scenes. One of the most important painters of her generation, Eisenman (b. 1965, Verdun, France) has developed a distinct figurative language that combines the imaginative with the lucid, the absurd with the banal, and the stereotypical with the countercultural and queer. “Nicole Eisenman: Al-ugh-ories” will highlight how allegory permeates her oeuvre and how she fluidly ties the fictional to the autobiographical and the past to the present.
From the outset of her career, Eisenman’s investment in painting has led to frequent experimentation in other mediums, and her practice is characterized by visible shifts that mark her effort never to become too comfortable with any one approach to painting. Eisenman’s preoccupation with the figure and the complexity of its gestures and form has resulted in mesmerizing portraits of an array of characters who range from friends and fellow New Yorkers, to imagined heroines, to tragic losers. From Success to Obscurity (2004) depicts a monstrous superhero contemplating the contents of a letter it holds in its hands and alludes, perhaps, to the fragility of fame and fortune. In Hamlet (2007), a depiction of Shakespeare’s beautiful and frail Danish prince with lowered sword, Eisenman ponders the possibility of a sensitive and cautious leader at a time when the US was in the final year of George W. Bush’s presidency. Similarly inspired by contemporary events, the large group portrait The Triumph of Poverty (2009), painted in the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis, is a reimagining of a lost sixteenth-century painting of the same title by Hans Holbein. “Nicole Eisenman: Al-ugh-ories” will also include one of the artist’s large-scale plaster figures, which she began producing in recent years, and two new oversize wax heads made specifically for this exhibition.
In her often-narrative compositions Eisenman draws as much from art history as from popular culture, and her works, while accessible and humorous, occasionally yield critical and poignant images of contemporary life. Eisenman freely references painters as varied as Giotto, Francisco de Goya, Paul Cézanne, Pablo Picasso, and Edvard Munch, but uses wit and irreverence to undermine historical hierarchies and to make her depictions of familiar events such as eating, sleeping, walking, or making love appear distinctly contemporary. While Eisenman’s subjects and narratives have always been in conversation with their time, her work remains timeless and captivating because of her ability to portray the essence of human desire as equally raw and awkward.
tue, wed, fri, sat, sun 11:00 am – 6:00 pm; thu 11:00 am – 9:00 pm
mon
M: info@newmuseum.org
Website
ADDRESS
New Museum, 235 Bowery
ESTABLISHED
1977