Frith Street Gallery is holding an exhibition of rarely seen works on paper by Marlene Dumas and Juan Muñoz. Though quite different in approach, Dumas’ and Muñoz’s practice shows deep concerns for the human body, our relationship to it and its status as a recurring motif across the entire history of art.
Marlene Dumas / Juan Muñoz: Drawings
16 January 2015 – 17 April 2015
Frith Street Gallery is holding an exhibition of rarely seen works on paper by Marlene Dumas and Juan Muñoz. Though quite different in approach, Dumas’ and Muñoz’s practice shows deep concerns for the human body, our relationship to it and its status as a recurring motif across the entire history of art.
Juan Muñoz (1953 -2001) came to international prominence in the mid 1980s with sculptural installations that placed the figure in architectural environments. He has always been a storyteller and his carefully staged configurations hint at ambiguous scenarios. Drawing is central to Muñoz’s practice and this exhibition presents a series of works on paper from 1995 depicting a particular part of the human anatomy: the mouth. This orifice is particularly significant in much of the artist’s work primarily for its role in the act of communication. Sound, or rather the lack of it, has been another continual feature in Muñoz’s work; from silent laughter to ventriloquists, prompters and seemingly whispered conversations, it becomes present by its very absence.
For this exhibition Marlene Dumas has created a number of new works on paper in response to the historical pieces by Muñoz: surprising and intimate they engage in a conversation across time and media. The image of the body in Dumas’ work is often inspired by such diverse sources as newspaper and magazine cuttings, personal memorabilia, historical paintings, and Polaroid photographs. The majority of her works may be categorised as ‘portraits’, but they are not portraits in the traditional sense. Instead of depicting an actual person, they use form and colour to represent an emotion or a state of mind. Themes central to Dumas’ work include race and sexuality, guilt and innocence and the space between violence and tenderness.
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Full info and text: www.frithstreetgallery.com/shows/view/marlene_dumas_juan_munoz_drawings