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Felix Gonzalez-Torres

01.10.2006 to 09.01.2007

Hamburger Bahnhof – Nationalgalerie der Gegenwart
Hamburger Bahnhof – Nationalgalerie der Gegenwart

An exhibition of the New Society for Visual Art (NGBK /Realismusstudio) in cooperation with the Nationalgalerie in the Hamburger Bahnhof - Museum für Gegenwart - Berlin funded by the Capital Cultural Fund in Berlin.

The RealismusStudio of the New Society of Fine Arts (Neue Gesellschaft für Bildende Kunst) will be presenting a comprehensive retrospective at the Hamburger Bahnhof - Museum für Gegenwart - Berlin. The exhibition concentrates on the artist's semi-temporary and reproducible works as well as on a selection from his photographic oeuvre.

Felix Gonzalez-Torres was one of the most important American artists of the 1990s. His work is characterized by a keen understanding of the social, cultural and political situation and an ability to translate such complex circumstances and events into the simplest of forms. The formal openness of the content of his objects and photographs contrasts with his political statements and private experiences. He leaves it up to viewers to interpret them as they will, aware that these interpretations will be dependent on their cultural and socio-political contexts.

Aesthetically polished and socially provocative, Felix Gonzalez-Torres used minimalist strategies and added personal, social and political meaning. Through his work in the 1990s, he made an important contribution to the critical reception of minimalism and concept art as politically motivated art forms within the "system". His aim was on the one hand to work within the traditional context of art-making practices, on the other hand to infiltrate the system. This may be seen for instance in the billboard projects shown at public sites, in which he makes use of subversively aesthetic marketing strategies and thus open up for discussion questions of what is "private" and what is "public".

As a gay artist of Cuban origin, another theme of Felix Gonzalez-Torres' work was societal emancipation, including sexual emancipation; the gender discussion; equal integration of ethnic groups and of feminist theory and practice in the general art discourse. The blotting out of history, the efficiency of the political system, the omnipresence of ideology and the AIDS crisis all culminate in Gonzalez-Torres's artistic work and activity.

This retrospective coincides with the 10th anniversary of the death of Felix Gonzalez-Torres. The artist's work has been shown in five RealismusStudio exhibitions since 1988 (two of them solo exhibitions). The curator of the show, Frank Wagner, has followed his artistic development almost from the beginning. In this exhibition the works byGonzalez-Torres will not be just refabricated, but reinstalled.

Felix Gonzalez-Torres demands active participation of his recipients in shaping his work thereby questioning the inviolability of the work of art. Work such as stacks (of paper) and candy spills develop their full meaning and function only once they have been put to use. Sheets of paper can be taken home and the candies consumed. This concept is the consequence of an iconography whose subjects always include loss, transitoriness, memory and of course renewal. The fact that in the course of the exhibition the works disappear before the eyes of the visitors is evocative of the finite nature of human existence. Yet the work can be regenerated thereby bringing into it the potential for change and hope and putting into question the idea of our unknowable yet ever-changing future.

Biographical notes
Felix Gonzalez-Torres was born in Güaimaro, Cuba in 1957, leaving Cuba in 1971 to Madrid. In 1979 he emigrated to New York, later he became an American citizen. In 1981 he graduated from the Pratt Institute of Art, later going on to spend two years attending the Whitney Independent Study Program. In 1987 he was awarded the degree of Master of Fine Arts by the International Center of Photography and New York University; in the same year his first solo exhibition took place at the Rastovsky Gallery, New York. After that followed: 1990 solo exhibition at the Andrea Rosen Gallery, New York; 1991 Whitney Biennial, New York; 1995, solo exhibition at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York. He will be representing the United States at the Venice Biennale in 2007.
Felix Gonzalez-Torres died in Miami on 9 January 1996 from AIDS-related complications.