Press Release
“The mattresses become not just litter in the landscape but more like scary animals.”- Ed Ruscha

Ed Ruscha has been casting his eye across the landscapes of the American west for over 50 years, taking in everything from gas stations to swimming pools to sublime mountain ranges. With their clarity and deadpan wit, his photographs, drawings and paintings impart a mood of playful awe on everyday monuments. The motifs for his new series Metro Mattresses were found, like so many of the subjects of his work, on the streets of Los Angeles. In each of the twelve works in the series we encounter a mattress, or mattresses, isolated and in various states of neglect, all depicted against a neutral backdrop.

Mattresses are evocative objects: repositories of dreams, essential yet private, at once mundane and lush with possibility. When a mattress wears out, it becomes a cumbersome slab of raw intimacy that needs to be discarded. Ruscha noticed the mattresses cast aside on the streets of LA and began photographing them systematically before translating the images into pictures on paper-like museum board. The consistent neutral background emphasises the typological nature and the heightened formality of the series, transforming the boxes of springs and padding into geometric abstractions. Yet the rhomboids and rectangles slump and fold with age, while the jagged rips and occasional trickles of fluid remind us that the mattresses have absorbed countless intimate experiences. The serial nature of the Metro Mattresses works might also bring to mind some of Ruscha’s earliest work, such as Twentysix Gasoline Stations (1963) or Every Building on Sunset Strip (1966).

In addition to the mattresses, three ‘word’ pictures – as important to the artist’s oeuvre as landscape – also feature in the exhibition. Spelling out the title ‘Metro Mattresses’ or ‘Metro Matt’, and blazing across the paper like advertising slogans, the drawings on paper underline the melancholy humour of the series. If the word metro evokes a big city teeming with anonymous people, nothing offers a more intimate corner of daily existence than a mattress.

The artist book Metro Mattresses is being published on occasion of the exhibition.

Ed Ruscha (1937, Omaha, Nebraska) lives and works in Los Angeles. Upcoming solo shows include Ed Ruscha: MIXMASTER, Pinacoteca Giovanni e Marella Agnelli, Turin (7 November 2015 – 8 March 2016), and Ed Ruscha And the Great American West, de Young Museum San Francisco (16 July – 9 October 2016). Recent solo shows include In Focus: Ed Ruscha, The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles, Ed Ruscha – Los Angeles Apartments, Kunstmuseum Basel (both 2013), the ongoing exhibition Ed Ruscha: Books and Paintings at the Museum Brandhorst, Munich (since June 2013), Reading Ed Ruscha, Kunsthaus Bregenz (2012), On the Road, Hammer Museum, Los Angeles (2011) and the major retrospective 50 Years of Painting, Hayward Gallery, London, Haus der Kunst, Munich and Moderna Museet, Stockholm (2009-10). Current group shows include La vie moderne, 13th Biennale de Lyon (2015-16) and Various Small Fires (Working Documents) at LACMA, Los Angeles (2015-16). In 2012 Ruscha curated the group show The Ancients Stole All Our Great Ideas at the Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna.

Installation view, Ed Ruscha, Metro Mattresses, Sprüth Magers, Berlin, November 03, 2015 - January 16, 2016.

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About the Artist

Ed Ruscha was born in 1937 in Omaha, Nebraska; he lives and works in Los Angeles. In 2005 Ruscha represented the United States of America at the 51st Venice Biennale; in September 2006, Ruscha was awarded the cultural prize of the Deutsche Gesellschaft für Photographie (DGPh, ‘German Society for Photography’).

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About the Gallery

Sprüth Magers has expanded from its roots in Cologne (Germany) to become an international gallery dedicated to exhibiting the very best in groundbreaking modern and contemporary art. With galleries located in Berlin Mitte, London’s Mayfair and the Miracle Mile in Los Angeles–as well as an office in Cologne and an outpost in Hong Kong–Sprüth Magers retains close ties with the studios and communities of the German and American artists who form the core of its roster.

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