Hauser Wirth & Schimmel is pleased to present “Revolution in the Making: Abstract Sculpture by Women, 1947-2016,” the inaugural exhibition at its new complex at 901 E. Third St. in the heart of the downtown Los Angeles Arts District.

Through nearly 100 works made by 34 artists over the past 70 years, this ambitious undertaking traces ways in which women have changed the course of art by deftly transforming the language of sculpture since the postwar period. Works on view reveal their makers inventing radically new forms and processes that privilege solo studio practice, tactility, and the idiosyncrasies of the artist’s own hand.

“Revolution in the Making” explores multiple strains of artistic approaches, characterized by abstraction and repetition, that reject the precedent of a monolithic masterwork on a pedestal, employing such tactics as stacking, hanging, and intertwining, to create an intimate reciprocity between artist and viewer.

Untitled [S. 228, Hanging Six-Lobed, Discontinuous Surface (three sections) with Interlocked Top Section]. Ruth Asawa, circa 1962. Copper and brass wire, naturally oxidized. 24.8 x 43.2 x 43.2 cm / 96 x 17 x17 in. © Estate of Ruth Asawa, courtesy Christie's. Photo: JKA Photography
Untitled [S. 228, Hanging Six-Lobed, Discontinuous Surface (three sections) with Interlocked Top Section]. Ruth Asawa, circa 1962. Copper and brass wire, naturally oxidized. 24.8 x 43.2 x 43.2 cm / 96 x 17 x17 in. © Estate of Ruth Asawa, courtesy Christie’s. Photo: JKA Photography
The exhibition examines how elements that are central to art today – including engagement with found, experimental, and recycled materials, as well as an embrace of contingency, imperfection, and unstructured play – were propelled by the work of women who, in seeking new means to express their own voices, dramatically expanded the definition of sculpture.

On view through Sept. 4, “Revolution in the Making” is co-curated by Paul Schimmel, former chief curator of the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, and partner and vice president at Hauser & Wirth; and Jenni Sorkin, art historian, critic, and assistant professor of contemporary art history at UC Santa Barbara. It includes many works on loan from nearly 60 major American museums, artists’ estates, and private collections, as well as new sculptures commissioned for the exhibition.

The show is accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue published in collaboration with Skira. This book includes original contributions by Sorkin, as well as Elizabeth A.T. Smith, executive director of the Helen Frankenthaler Foundation and former chief curator at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago; and Anne M. Wagner, art historian, critic, and Class of 1936 professor emerita, UC Berkeley.

Tracing a Revolution

Feminism changed the course of 20th-century art by altering the very notion of what art could be. Hewing to more sensuous materials and the intimate processes of the handmade, women sculptors at mid-century began to turn away from the dominant masculinist language of art in order to articulate female sensibility and experience in their work, shifting the dialogue of art and laying the foundations for a revolution.

The late 1940s and 1950s saw women asserting their own content into the formal geometries of post-war abstract sculpture. The collision of Post-Minimalism and feminism in the 1960s and 1970s witnessed women making their boldest breakthroughs and pioneering a “no going back” course for subsequent generations of the 1980s, 1990s, and beyond.

To explore the story of these radical shifts and their legacy, “Revolution in the Making” unfolds as a thematic historical survey that is international in scope and fundamentally revisionist, making women artists central to the history of sculpture by tracing the legacy of studio-based organic abstraction. Their collective innovation – their pioneering of new forms, materials, and processes – has been far more influential than has been previously understood or recognized.

While the individual contributions of such artists as Louise Bourgeois and Eva Hesse have been widely acknowledged, “Revolution in the Making” offers a narrative that includes many other artists who have contributed to the evolution of abstract sculpture through their working methods and materials. The exhibition moves chronologically, comprising dozens of works by 34 sculptors of different generations and points of origin, evidencing remarkable variety in thought, approach, and purpose.

But all of the sculptures included – from the overt to the enigmatic, the purely formal to the concertedly psychological, the self-contained to the enveloping – are connected by materiality, expressiveness, and tactility, and through the autonomous labor of the artist in her studio.

“Revolution in the Making” begins in the immediate post-war era with the historically important predecessors Ruth Asawa, Lee Bontecou, Louise Bourgeois, Claire Falkenstein and Louise Nevelson. Spanning the late 1940s through the early 1960s, these works examine abstraction based upon oblique evocations of the fragmented body and the influence of the unconscious, with seriality and repetition emerging as essential idioms of a new sculptural language.

Among highlights here are an extraordinary grouping of Bourgeois’ “Personage” sculptures made in New York and first seen at the Peridot Gallery in 1949. They are juxtaposed with a dramatic installation of a dozen of the most significant hanging looped wire sculptures made by Asawa. Also on view are bas-relief works by Bontecou, whose use of the void within welded armature achieves a highly original representation of the body, showcasing an aggressive physicality in a shallow space.

“Revolution in the Making” continues with the 1960s and 1970s, and includes works by Magdalena Abakanowicz, Lynda Benglis, Heidi Bucher, Gego, Françoise Grossen, Eva Hesse, Sheila Hicks, Yayoi Kusama, Mira Schendel, Michelle Stuart, Hannah Wilke, and Jackie Winsor – Post-Minimalist artists who ignited a revolution in their use of process-oriented materials and methods. Instead of vehicles of meaning, these sculptors produced forms that celebrate techniques of making and a one-to-one relationship with materials within the private sphere of the studio.

"A Snake," Yayoi Kusama, 1974. Mixed media. 30.5 x 650.2 x 25.4 cm / 12 x 256 x 10 in. Private collection, USA © Yayoi Kusama. Courtesy of Anthony Meier Fine Arts, San Francisco. Photo: Michael Bodycomb, New York
“A Snake,” Yayoi Kusama, 1974. Mixed media. 30.5 x 650.2 x 25.4 cm / 12 x 256 x 10 in. Private collection, USA © Yayoi Kusama. Courtesy of Anthony Meier Fine Arts, San Francisco. Photo: Michael Bodycomb, New York

Sculptures in this section of the exhibition evidence a strong sense of materiality through stacking, layering, cutting, draping, rubbing, gouging, and other tactile processes as means of conveying presence and a sense of their makers’ being-in-the-world. These works are characterized by striking – and, ultimately, enduringly influential – formal innovations, including the appropriation of unconventional industrial materials like latex and rope, organic and natural materials like saplings and earth, and ephemeral materials like wax and paper.

Among highlights here are two renowned late monumental works by Hesse: the latex and canvas floor work “Augment” and the four-part wall piece “Aught,” both created in 1968. These daring and powerful sculptures question the liminal space between painting and sculpture, with Hesse using the armature of the wall and the floor to layer, wrap, cover, and engage space, chance, indeterminacy, and the potency of matter in flux. The two sculptures were first shown in tandem in the legendary exhibition “9 at Leo Castelli Warehouse” (1968), curated by artist Robert Morris; the inaugural exhibition at Hauser Wirth & Schimmel reunites them for the first time.

Also reunited are Hicks’ saffron colored linen and wool “Banisteriopsis” (1965-1966) and “Banisteriopsis II’”(1965-1966/2010). Hicks, like Hesse, attended Yale and moved from color theory and drawing into three-dimensional work; by the early and mid-1960s, Hicks was actively exploring strategies of layering, stacking, folding, and weaving.

Abakanowicz’s massive 1973 “Wheel with Rope,” an aggressive sculpture made of found industrial materials, contrasts with defining 1970s “pour pieces” by Benglis, who solved the riddle of how to translate gestural abstraction into sculpture by engaging walls and floors in a suggestive violation of spatial conventions.

Also here is a large grouping of Wilke’s “blossoms,” which reverberate with nearby works by Schendel and Gego, European émigrés whose delicate sculptures reinvented the notion of drawing as a spatial celebration of the artist’s one-on-one relationship with her materials.

Located in L.A.'s Arts District, Hauser Wirth & Schimmel held its grand opening on March 13.
Located in L.A.’s Arts District, Hauser Wirth & Schimmel held its grand opening on March 13.

In one of the most dramatic gestures of “Revolution in the Making,” Winsor’s soaring “30 to 1 Bound Trees” stands at the center of Hauser Wirth & Schimmel’s sprawling outdoor courtyard, an architectural hub where key galleries of the complex converge and connect. Winsor’s 20-foot-high mast of white birch saplings and hemp rope, originally created in 1971 at the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design and recreated for the first time in its original form for this exhibition, anchors a space that is both a physical and psychological orientation point, a destination and an intersection.

The exhibition continues with works by Isa Genzken, Cristina Iglesias, Liz Larner, Anna Maria Maiolino, Marisa Merz, Senga Nengudi, Lygia Pape, and Ursula von Rydingsvard – a Post Modernist generation of increasingly global figures who are far more expansive in their use of space, and whose works signal a foundational shift from discreet sculptural objects toward more installation-based practices. These women have focused upon dimensional forms as alternatives to the criticality of the feminist gaze conveyed in other media.

Co-curator Sorkin has written, “Somewhere in the 1990s, the artist in her studio took a permanent backseat to the politics of assertion: the declarations of race, sexuality, and class. ‘Preciousness’ became a term used to denigrate abstraction. And yet the qualities it implied were arguably symptomatic of abstraction: a sensitivity to objects, and the disquieting intensity devoted to the process of making them.”

Artists in this passage engage space more aggressively in order to work through questions of structure and materials, drawing performance, social critique, and previously untried mediums into their sculpture. Collapsing the intimate and the monumental, von Rydingsvard’s carved cedar “Untitled (Nine Cones)” (1976) is an ideal example of these eliding agendas.

Other highlights here are an array of Genzken’s miniature concrete building-like works from 1986-1990; and exceptional translucent wire and metallic string works by Merz and Pape, revealing their makers’ respective quests for transcendence through abstraction. The space in which the viewer exists becomes immersive and inclusive as sculptures move away from being self-contained objects, expanding rather than consolidating.

“Revolution in the Making” concludes with a new generation of sculptors, including numerous works commissioned for the exhibition. Phyllida Barlow, Karla Black, Abigail DeVille, Sonia Gomes, Rachel Khedoori, Lara Schnitger, Shinique Smith, Jessica Stockholder, and Kaari Upson create immersive, color-drenched environments that embrace domestic materials and craft as an embedded discourse, boldly eliminating material hierarchies. Color is introduced in a way that is riotous and painterly.

Eschewing the armatures and supports employed by previous generations, the sculptures here do not make form their subject. And at a time when so much art is mechanically fabricated and editioned, these works defy the perceived limitations of studio-based sculpture and celebrate the enduring power of the handmade.

The most recent works build upon the legacy of previous generations. Here visitors will recognize an amalgam of influences from the women artists who came before: The knotting, weaving, piling, and slumping of earlier eras have expanded into forest-like installations redolent of contemporary urban experience.

Recycling has become the craft tactic of the present. Nengudi’s pantyhose have been replaced by Black’s lip liner and pulverized eye shadow; Smith’s shredded clothing and ribbons kiss a wall that Benglis would once have violated with a tumbling waterfall of poured and cast aluminum; and Stockholder’s agglomerations feature un-sturdy metal protrusions that evoke the legs of Genzken’s concrete works of the 1980s.

Perhaps most significant of all, the discreet human body – a central preoccupation of women abstract sculptors in earlier decades – has now disappeared. In its place, the artists in the final section of “Revolution in the Making” offer an empty space for the viewer’s own body. Moving through, under, around, and within these new sculptures, the visitor becomes partner and participant in the continuing quest to articulate the female experience through art.

Hours are Wednesday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m., Thursday from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. For more information, call (213) 943-1620 or visit www.hauserwirth.com.

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