
David Zwirner is pleased to present an exhibition of drawings by Robert Ryman (1930–2019) at the gallery’s London location. Organised in collaboration with the artist’s estate, this exhibition will include works from throughout Ryman’s career, complementing the major presentation of paintings by the artist from the early 1960s that will be on view at the gallery’s 537 West 20th Street location in New York, curated by Dieter Schwarz.
Much like his analytical yet intuitive exploration of the medium of painting, Ryman’s drawings reflect a singular and varied investigation and deconstruction of the formal and material qualities of drawing and line. As Schwarz writes: ‘Drawings by Robert Ryman are not necessarily works on paper. They can also be executed on canvas, anodised aluminium, polyester cloth, Plexiglas, or Mylar, and for those in fact done on paper, that can include not just drawing paper—mostly tinted yellow or gray—but also coffee filter paper, manila paper, or glassine. For Ryman, ‘drawing’ is not about being confined to a single genre or fixated on a conventional picture support. In his practice, a drawing is an object insofar as it does not represent anything. Yet it is not an object in the sense of a fixed given: it is the outcome of a process during which he verifies the properties of the medium and the support of the drawing, connecting the two and creating a linear configuration that involves both components.’1
1 Dieter Schwarz, “Drawing the Drawing: Robert Ryman, Working the Line,” Robert Ryman: Drawings. Exh. cat. (New York: Pace, 2018), p. 7.

Robert Ryman (1930–2019) was born in Nashville, Tennessee. Between 1948 and 1950, he studied at the Tennessee Polytechnic Institute, Cookeville, and the George Peabody College for Teachers, Nashville. After two years in the Army Reserve Corps, Ryman moved to New York in 1953 to pursue a career as a professional jazz musician. That same year, he took a job as a security guard at The Museum of Modern Art, New York, where he would work for seven years. His time working at the museum in part inspired Ryman to devote his life to painting.

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