Press Release

This month, we are pleased to debut two simultaneous exhibitions with celebrated American artist Paul McCarthy that are united by the artist’s focus upon intractable myths, fantasies, and delusions coursing through contemporary society and consumer culture. On view 14 July, the online exhibition A&E Drawing Session, Santa Anita unveils a new series of large scale drawings from McCarthy’s latest multidisciplinary project A&E (2019 - ). On 18 July, the exhibition Alpine Stories and other Dystopias will open at Tarmak 22, an exhibition space in Gstaad where visitors will find a selection of the artist’s drawings, photographs, sculptures, and video work from his acclaimed series ‘Heidi’, ‘White Snow’, ‘Caribbean Pirates’, and ‘PROPO’.

Artist Paul McCarthy is perhaps most closely associated with his hometown of Los Angeles, a place whose Hollywood’s illusions have fed his prodigious five-decade practice. But McCarthy is also something of an honorary citizen of Switzerland, an enthusiast of all things Swiss who can trace unlikely connections between the sublime landscape and stories of the alpine nation, and the magical kingdom of LA’s Disneyland. ‘I was really into the Matterhorn at Disneyland because I was also into the real Matterhorn and mountains and climbing,’ he has said. ‘The whole alpine aesthetic—chalets, cuckoo clocks, knotty pine, boots, parkas and all that. Making a piece that references Disneyland directly didn’t happen until I moved to LA. My interest in Disneyland spins out of my interest in Hollywood.’

Beginning 18 July, Hauser & Wirth will present Alpine Stories and other Dystopias at Tarmak 22 in Gstaad, bringing together a selection of works by McCarthy that span two decades and various mediums to reveal the provocative ways in which both worlds—the storied Swiss Alps and the ersatz magic of Hollywood’s Disney fantasies—overlap, intertwine, and refract in startlingly powerful ways. Themes of innocence and utopia, and their inverses of depravity and dystopia, course through the drawings, photographs, sculptures, and video work on view. These have been selected from the artist’s celebrated large-scale projects and series ‘Heidi’, ‘White Snow’, and ‘Caribbean Pirates’, as well as his ‘PROPO’ photographs.

McCarthy looks beneath the endearing façades of classic Disney productions and the sanitised versions of European fables, to excavate the untamed urges and pathologies of their real world parallels. Deploying humour and irony in such series as ‘White Snow’ and ‘Caribbean Pirates’, he fleshes out familiar characters as avatars of the libidinousness, violence, conflict, and chaos of human society. The walnut sculpture WS, White Snow Dopey Dopey Head, Five Feet (2014), for example, conjures perverse visions of Snow White’s relationship with the dwarf Dopey from Disney’s beloved 1937 animated classic film Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. This sculpture is among five White Snow works in the exhibition that take the famous fairytale as a springboard for exploring the Oedipal complexities of family, the institutionalisation of history, and the urges of pop culture consumption. Among these works is the large scale sculpture White Snow Head (2012), a flesh-coloured silicone rendering of the princess with the aspect of a toppled idol from antiquity. Taking on another beloved icon, McCarthy’s Santa (with Butt Plug) Bronze (2004) embraces debauchery and desire as part of the territory where our fundamental impulses collide with our most cherished myths and hypocritical societal norms.

These works acquire additional layers of meaning in the setting of Tarmak 22, with its monumental windows offering views of the Alpine landscape outside, and in juxtaposition with key works from McCarthy’s ‘Heidi’ series. The artist has stated that ‘the purity of Alpine culture is not pure.’ He explored this notion in his landmark 1992 video work Heidi, made with fellow artist Mike Kelley. The opus, on view here, was inspired by the eponymous 1881 children’s book by Swiss author Johanna Spyri, a story not uncoincidentally made into a Disney television spectacular in 1993. Heidi File (2000), a collection of photographs taken from found images, finds McCarthy returning to the iconic Swiss character as subject matter. Using material drawn from posters, maps, magazines, and other ephemera, he explores the many possible incarnations of the innocent mountain girl. By displaying the different representations of the heroine and her Alpine environment, McCarthy juxtaposes the banality of advertisements and found objects, with their insidious manipulation of ‘innocence’, to awaken viewers to the darker dystopian truths of mass consumer culture.

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About the Artist

Paul McCarthy is widely considered to be one of the most influential and groundbreaking contemporary American artists. Born in 1945, and raised in Salt Lake City, Utah, he first established a multi-faceted artistic practice, which sought to break the limitations of painting by using unorthodox materials such as bodily fluids and food. He has since become known for visceral, often hauntingly humorous work in a variety of mediums - from performance, photography, film, and video, to sculpture, drawing, and painting.

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Also Exhibiting at Hauser & Wirth

About the Gallery

Hauser & Wirth was founded in 1992 in Zurich by Iwan Wirth, Manuela Wirth and Ursula Hauser, who were joined in 2000 by Partner and Vice President Marc Payot. A family business with a global outlook, Hauser & Wirth has expanded over the past 26 years to include outposts in Hong Kong, London, New York, Los Angeles, Somerset and Gstaad. The gallery represents over 70 artists and estates who have been instrumental in shaping its identity over the past quarter century, and who are the inspiration for Hauser & Wirth’s diverse range of activities that engage with art, education, conservation and sustainability.

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Hong Kong 15-16/F, H Queen's, 80 Queen's Road Central
Hauser & Wirth
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