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Anselm Kiefer, anyone?

 
 
iconoplast
23:49 / 01.12.02
Gagosian Gallery is pleased to announce an exhibition of new works by Anselm Kiefer. “Merkaba”, the third exhibition of Anselm Kiefer's work this gallery has presented, is composed of eight large-scale paintings and two monumental sculptures made of concrete and steel. The works are inspired by Kabbalist literature dealing primarily with the afterlife.

The Merkaba and Hechaloth literature, as discussed in the Kabbalah texts, deal specifically with the ascent up to seven heavenly palaces or temples, which represent the seven attainments of divine spirituality. For Kiefer, the Merkaba, or mystical chariot used for this passage, is not the vehicle towards a single apocalyptic Judgment Day but, rather, a means to the ongoing process of working at art.

Kiefer’s spiritual architecture of the heavenly palaces brings the seas and land, the heavens and earth back together. His poetry of images unites NASA’s cosmological ordering of the stars with the mystical order of ascent to the Palaces of Heaven.
 
 
darknes23
04:17 / 02.12.02
where is this gallery? have seen 'zim zum'(?) at the national gallery of art in washington d.c.(that shit'll knock the breath out of you), and i would be more than intrigued to see more. is there any further info...oh, wait, i'll just search for 'gagosian gallery.' or whatever...
 
 
Ethan Hawke
11:32 / 02.12.02
Have you been to the show, iconoplast? I saw a write-up on it in "Time Out", and it looks really interesting. I'm planning to go sometime in the next week or so, when I can get my act together. I'm not familiar with Keifer at all, really, but the painting they showed in the article looked really good.
 
 
iconoplast
14:05 / 02.12.02
Yeah, I went on saturday. It's on 24th street, all the way west. And it's badass. Lots of the stuff in the gallery is really big, made out of concrete and bent rebar and burnt torahs and stuff. But the pieces that I really liked were these smaller ones in a side room. One of which involved a dodecahedron inscribed within the tree of life.

I'm still puzzling over that one.

But, yeah - the show is great, and right down the street, Thomas Hirshhorn has created an installation space out of cardboard and duct tape, making a gallery into a cave with televisions for light and torn up philosophy books for cave paintings. It's worth seeing, too.
 
  
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