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31 janvier 2009

YVON LAMBERT London

Andres Serrano
The Unbearable Lightness of Being
February 3 - March 28, 2009

 

Opening Tuesday Feb 3 at 6 pm

 

 

http://www.yvon-lambert.com/

Rene, 1990

Press Release

Yvon Lambert is pleased to announce a survey of the work of Andres Serrano.  The title LʼInsoutenable Légèreté de lʼEtre (The Unbearable Lightness of Being) is taken from Kunderaʼs book of 1984 that chronicled the fragile nature of the fate of the individual and how a life lived once may as well have never been lived at all, as there is no possibility for repetition, experiment, and trial and error. Serrano uses photography as a medium to explore various aspects of ʻoutsiderʼ life. His highly coloured photographs have an artificial quality that recalls his past training in painting and sculpture.

Emerging to prominence in the late eighties with his infamous Piss Christ (1988), Serranoʼs work has continued to deal with the sacred and profane, the grand and the mundane with an almost spiritual approach manifested in bright colours and surreal reality. In his Body Fluids and Immersion series (1987-90) Serrano used the luminous quality of liquid excrement to create celestial imagery, forcing us to confront the taboos around such abject matter. These photographs create a realistic artifice that disorientates the viewer.

In The Morgue (1992) Serrano made large, close-up colour photographs, portraits, figure studies, and studies of hands, feet, heads, and genitals of corpses creating a fragmented view of the dead body.   

An instrument of death is the focus in the series Objects of Desire (1992), which celebrates the human obsession with the weapon. Presented as a phallus or fetish Serrano comments on the representation of the weapon in American culture; the crime and gangster scene, US folklore and the cowboys of Western cinema. 

America has become more explicitly an integral part of his work, as we can see fromhis post 9/11 series America (2004), which presented large-scale portraits of various members of American society in an attempt to show the vast array of nationalities and personalities that exist in the ʻland of the freeʼ. This is a continuation of his series Nomads and The Clan (Ku Klux Klan) where he presented two extreme views of cursed or dissevered members of ʻoutsiderʼ American society.   

The seductive nature of these images becomes almost fantastical in Serranoʼs work. From the controversial series A History of Sex (1995-96) with itʼs graphic depictions of fascinating sexual acts, to his early series that looked to the spiritual ecstasy of religion. The show will feature his recent Shit works whereby he depicts a base and universal material as a momentous landscape with a luminosity that betrays the substanceʼs original state. It is this sensual intensity that makes Serranoʼs work especially prevalent in a time of mass media that subsumes politics, religion and glamour into one big palette.

Serranoʼs work is held in the permanent international collections including the Whitney Museum of Contemporary Art, New York, Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston, Modern Art Museum, Fort Worth, Reina Sofia, Madrid and the New Museum of Contemporary Art, New York, to name a few. 

Contact : Elodie Cazes / elodie@yvon-lambert.com

YVON LAMBERT London
20 Hoxton Square
London N1 6NT
t +44 207 729 2687, f +44 207 729 6141
Tuesday-Saturday : 10am - 6pm

london@yvon-lambert.com
www.yvon-lambert.com

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