
I never try to come up with some diabolical strategy to capture the public’s attention. Sometimes it just happens. I guess I go for absolutes.—Rudolf Stingel
Gagosian is pleased to announce an exhibition of new works by Rudolf Stingel, opening at the gallery at 980 Madison Avenue, New York, on March 14, 2024. This is the first exhibition by Stingel at this location to incorporate paintings into an interior intervention of the kind produced previously for exhibitions at Palazzo Grassi, Venice (2013–14); Fondation Beyeler, Riehen/Basel, Switzerland (2019); Bourse de Commerce, Paris (2022–23); and Gagosian, rue de Ponthieu, Paris (2023).
Adopting a radical approach to art making that devotes equal attention to material, process, image, and concept, Stingel has, over a four-decade career, repeatedly subverted painterly and sculptural orthodoxies. Often addressing themes of time, memory, and perception, his works are contingent upon audiences for their completion, refuting traditional notions of authorship and autonomy. For this exhibition he again undercuts viewers’ expectations, juxtaposing retro components within a reconfigured exhibition space in a bittersweet appeal to nostalgia.
By narrowing the doorway that leads into the sixth-floor gallery at 980 Madison Avenue and leaving the modest renovation’s interior structure exposed, Stingel unsettles viewers quietly from the outset. Inside, he has installed a vivid blue-and-orange-striped wall-to-wall carpet, transforming the ordinarily formal exhibition space into something more reminiscent of a basement recreation room. (Stingel first used carpet in an installation for Daniel Newburg Gallery, New York, in 1991, and has metamorphosed the surfaces of exhibition spaces in multiple locations since then.)
Ranged around the walls are three photorealistic paintings derived from photographs taken by Stingel with a 1970s vintage Polaroid instant camera. One panel depicts a single beer bottle, one the fixings for a martini, and one a full bar. The objects sit atop a paint-splattered studio table, suggesting that they may have provided creative stimulation. Evoking the still-life paintings of Giorgio Morandi in their affectless grouping of prosaic vessels, the images are reminiscent, too, of the Dutch and Flemish old masters’ meticulous attempts at everyday realism. The gaseous amber backdrop of each composition appears abstract but is in fact a fragment of an earlier canvas by Stingel depicting a sunset. The detail underscores the paintings’ reflexivity, adding an element of indirect self-portraiture that brings the whole undertaking full circle.
Playing in the gallery on a continuous loop is Smokin’ (1972). The successful fifth studio album by English rock band Humble Pie, it features songs including “30 Days in the Hole,” guitarist and singer Steve Marriott’s evocation of the aftermath of overindulgence in drink and drugs. A staple of Stingel’s youth, the record contributes to the installation’s wistful atmosphere, and to the feeling that it may have been—or may yet become—the scene of an apocalyptic bacchanal.
Press release courtesy Gagosian



Over the past twenty years, Rudolf Stingel has examined the nature of memory while expanding the scope and definition of painting. Central to his oeuvre is the passage of time rendered palpable, together with the expansion of the vocabulary of painting and its perception: from the abstract tulle silver paintings of the 1990s to the carpet installations that aestheticized both the surface of spaces and visitors’ traces; from the series of melancholic self-portraits to the latest golden canvases that bear the traces of time and action in the studio. Stingel’s artistic output is prolific and visually diverse, yet meticulous and generous in its offering.





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