Hauser & Wirth is honoured to inaugurate its new space on Wooster Street in New York City's historic SoHo-Cast Iron District with 'The Three Josephines,' an exhibition of exceptional new and recent works by celebrated Paris-based American artist, novelist and poet Barbara Chase-Riboud (b. 1939, Philadelphia). Internationally admired as one of the most visionary and innovative creators of her generation, Chase-Riboud will present sculptures and works on paper in her first exhibition with Hauser & Wirth since her representation by the gallery was announced earlier this year.
'The Three Josephines' will follow the landmark exhibition 'The Encounter: Barbara Chase-Riboud/ Alberto Giacometti' at The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), New York. On view from 5 May through 9 October, the exhibition paired the work of two pioneering artists whose breakthroughs expanded the language of modern sculpture. Additionally, Hauser & Wirth is planning a solo presentation of works by Chase-Riboud in its stand at Frieze London this October.
About the exhibitionAt the center of 'The Three Josephines' are three bronze sculptures that pay tribute to the legendary performer, civil rights activist and World War II secret agent Josephine Baker (1905–1975), only the fifth woman in history––and the first Black woman ever––to be inducted into the French Panthéon, the national tomb of heroes. Monumental in impact, balancing power and seduction, these sculptures are the latest works from Chase-Riboud's ongoing 'La Musica' series, which explores music, movement and stillness through bold juxtapositions of materials and forms. Rising two meters tall, each of the three patinated bronze sculptures stands upon its own stage-like platform and combines hard folds of metal with sumptuous textiles. With thick coils of silk spilling down to the floor from their apices, these decidedly abstract sculptures nevertheless conjure inevitable associations with the famously sinuous limbs of their namesake––meditations upon sensuality, creativity and the effects of living in a spotlight. Surrounding these earthly deities, Chase-Riboud presents a special selection of delicate all-white works on paper. Achieved through a technique the artist has developed and perfected over the past five decades, these amalgams of sculptural relief and drawing are made by piercing silk thread through Arches paper. Evoking both the cursive lines of handwriting and figurative structure of hieroglyphics, they are formally and conceptually linked to Chase-Riboud's automatic writings and poems. Each of the fourteen works carries a narrative title such as 'If what was written no longer remains' and 'My last word to you is folded lengthwise and knotted.' An award-winning poet and novelist, as well as a renowned visual artist, Chase-Riboud weaves her inspirations, ideas and technical prowess from one medium to the other, viewing them all as inseparable. Poetry, she once said, is 'very close to a discipline both familiar and dear to me: drawing. Both are dangerous searches for perfection... drawings prepared me for the demands of poetry.'
Press release courtesy Hauser & Wirth.
Wooster Street
New York
United States
Tuesday – Saturday
10am – 6pm