Gladstone Gallery, Sadie Coles HQ, Regen Projects, and Galerie Max Hetzler are pleased to announce SECONDARY, an exhibition in four parts by Matthew Barney. Unfolding sequentially across the galleries and staged in concert with an installation at the Fondation Cartier, each presentation traces the artist's career-long interest in the relationship between the body, transmogrification, physical possibility, and the deep-rooted history of violence that serves as a cornerstone to the American psyche. In addition to a new series of sculptures and drawings, Barney will premier his film, SECONDARY, in London, Paris, and Los Angeles. Across the installations, Barney re-maps subject matter that has repeatedly circulated within his oeuvre, conflating notions of material potential and myth-making with the specter of entropic collapse.
Each arm of the exhibition traces back to the artist's 2023 film, SECONDARY, a five-channel work that draws its inspiration from the infamous 1978 Raiders vs. Patriots game in which defensive back Jack Tatum delivered an open field hit that left wide receiver Darryl Stingley permanently paralyzed. Recalling his own memories of the play, the impact, and the culture of spectacle that continues to inform the incident today, Barney addresses the consequences of a sport that has become synonymous with physical brutality. Moving from pregame to game, from play to impact, and finally arriving at the media's relentless repetition of the collision itself, the exhibitions examine the connective tissue that joins our scopophilic desire to witness lethal force with the anxieties stirred by the vulnerabilities of our own bodies.
Consistent with Barney's practice, the sculptural works in the exhibition trespass from the screen to the gallery, blurring the distance between the artist's constructed cinematic narratives and the corporeal. Comprised of a range of materials that exhibit individual intrinsic behaviors, the objects in SECONDARY probe issues of time and aging. Conjuring the limits of the body by using mediums that respectively indicate elasticity (synthetic polymers), strength (cast metals), and fragility (ceramic), Barney both memorializes and pathologizes the Tatum/Stingley event. Also included in each exhibition are a new series of large-scale drawings on aluminum panel, each of which expands upon the motif of the field emblem. Simultaneously diagrammatic and abstract, these drawings examine issues of repetition, memory, and the flux between the symbolic and the real.
For his installation at Gladstone, SECONDARY: object replay, the artist offers a series of contemporary meditations on his most familiar forms. Here, his relentless interrogation of interiority is turned outward, and his traditional concerns are complicated by a series of iterative structures that each indicate a personal confrontation with violence. A cast ceramic sculpture titled Power Rack (prevertebral space) evokes both the absent figure and a leitmotif of vulnerability, its fractured crossbar, wilting towel, and parenthetical title suggesting injuries that are both visible and concealed. Created to echo both the internal mechanisms of the body and the subterranean infrastructure of the studio is Supine Atlas, a segmented ceramic pipe that plastic surgical scaffolding attempts to hold together. A collapsed net of dumbbells reveals the structure's misgivings. In Power Rack / Iron Inversion, Barney continues his tradition of ideating on the relationship between the constructed physique and the readymade, redoubling his examination of the points of contact that join abstraction and figuration.
Additionally, the artist presents_DRAWING RESTRAINT 26_. Executed, filmed and presented in Gladstone's 21st Street gallery, the work is performed as a duet between dancer Raphael Xavier (SECONDARY's Jack Tatum) and Barney (as quarterback Ken Stabler). Half performance and half presentation of trace, the work charts the repeated physical and psychological damage sustained by both players in endless replay. While Tatum's mark-making on the gallery walls is the result of a series of running drills conducted while he impacts a cast clay weight, other gestures belie something more ominous. One of the first NFL players to be diagnosed with Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy, Stabler leaves his imprint with a metal barbell and clay weight attached to his skull.
Matthew Barney was born in San Francisco in 1967 and lives and works in New York. Barney's most recent project, Redoubt, premiered at the Yale University Art Gallery on 1 March 2019, and is currently on view at the UCCA Center for Contemporary Art, Beijing, China through 12 January 2020. Additional one-person exhibitions include: THE CREMASTER CYCLE, organized by the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York and traveled to Museum Ludwig, Cologne and Musée d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris; DRAWING RESTRAINT, organised by the 21st Century Museum for Contemporary Art, Kanazawa, Japan and traveled to Leeum Samsung Museum of Art, Seoul; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; Serpentine Gallery, London; and Kunsthalle Vienna; and RIVER OF FUNDAMENT, organized by Haus der Kunst, Munich and travelled to The Museum of Old and New Art, Tasmania, and the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles. Barney has received numerous awards including the Aperto prize at the 1993 Venice Biennale; the Hugo Boss Award in 1996; the 2007 Kaiser Ring Award in Goslar, Germany and the San Francisco International Film Festival's Persistence of Vision Award in 2011.
Gladstone Gallery is a leading contemporary art gallery with locations in New York and Brussels. Currently representing over 70 artists, as well as major foundations and estates, Gladstone Gallery has played a significant role in launching the careers of several of the most notable artists working today. Gladstone Gallery artists work in a variety of media, including photography, video, installation, painting, and sculpture. Recent 2021 exhibitions include Wangechi Mutu, Jim Hodges, Arthur Jafa, Ugo Rondinone, Robert Mapplethorpe, Vivian Suter, and Shirin Neshat.
We partner with the world's leading galleries to showcase their artists, artworks and exhibitions. Vetted by an acclaimed group of industry peers, our gallery membership is by application and invitation only.
Learn more about Ocula MembershipLeaders in art advisory with unparalleled visibility and access to the art world's most influential galleries, collectors and auction houses.
Learn more about our team and servicesCelebrating the people and ideas shaping contemporary art via intelligent and insightful editorial.
Learn more about Ocula Magazine