Gallery | 49 is pleased to present "Abstract Gamma Hyphen",
an exhibition of sculptures, paintings and drawings by the celebrated
British-Romanian artist Paul Neagu. The exhibition, which opens
to the public on Thursday, April 8 will be the first solo show of
Paul Neagu at Gallery I 49 and the most recent since his retrospective
last year at Tate Britain.
The works on display address the subject of the Hyphen, which has
occupied the artist for several decades and span a period from 1975
to 2001. In addition to the series of "Hyphen" sculptures
created in steel, bronze and wood and the related graphic works,
the exhibition will also include a small selection of paintings
and drawings from Neagu's earlier "Anthropocosmos" series,
1971-73.
The metaphysical "Hyphen" shapes were originally developed
in the late 1960's in the context of Neagu's performances and were
first presented in 1975 at the Museum of Modern Art in Oxford. Geometrically,
the structures share a grammar of typical configurations and relationships.
The Hyphen (from the Greek "together") connects earth
and sky, time and space, by taking us through three different stages:
the triangle ("Blind Bite"), the rectangle ("Horizontal
Rain"), and, finally,
the Spiral (realization of freedom).
In their "rudimentary" architecture Neagu's hyphens resemble
ploughs or other simple agricultural tools and are related to the
same vernacular Romanian peasant tradition which was the foremost
inspiration in Brancusi's work. As the artist declares "Hyphen
is my recurrent instrument of work as the plough is for the farmer.
Conceptually it relates the essence of the earth to the body of
man and to the ideas of the harvest." Much has been discussed
about the Brancusian correspondence in Neagu's work, and indeed
he is one among Romanian artists to have integrated and pushed forward
Brancusi's heritage without ever producing imitative work.
Neagu's work is deeply engaged with the philosophies of Nietzche,
Heidegger and Derrida and stands as a link between the abstract
world of ideas and the solidity of the physical world. As Donald
Kuspit remarks, "From the start, Neagu was among the most imaginative
avant-garde innovators, all the more so because his works make a
conceptual point without sacrificing physical presence. His work
is uncategorizable because it cuts through avant-garde preconceptions
while assimilating its conventions into his own radical vision of
the relationship of art and mind."
Born in 1938 in Bucharest, Paul Neagu has graduated
from the Nicolae Grigorescu Art Institute in 1965. He settled in
England in 1969 as a result of one of those pioneering shows with
Joseph Beuys and Tadeusz Kantor organized by Richard Demarco in
the late 60's and early 70's. Since his establishment in London,
Paul Neagu has been regarded as one of the most intriguing contemporary
British artists - "an unclassifiable independent" as Paul
Overy has once called him. Over the years he had pursued a multi-layered
career as a visual artist, poet, philosopher, performance artist
and metaphysician and taught some of the most appreciated British
sculptors of the last two decades such as Tony Cragg, Anish Kapoor,
Richard Deacon, Anthony Gormely and Rachel Whiteread.
Neagus
work has been exhibited at the Museum of Modern Art, Oxford, the
Whitechapel Gallery, the Serpentine Gallery, the Institute of Contemporary
Arts (ICA) London, Queens Museum of Art, New York, The Museum of
Contemporary Art (MOCA), Los Angeles, The National Museum of Art
Bucharest, the Museum of Modern Art Ljuibliana, Slovenia and the
Venice Biennale. His sculptures, drawings and recorded performances
are included in numerous public and museum collection such as Tate
Gallery, British Museum, Victoria and Albert Museum, London, Philadelphia
Art Museum, Tochigi Museum, Japan and The National Museum of Art,
Bucharest, Romania among others. Last Spring Neagus retrospective
exhibition, "Paul Neagu: Display of the Artist's Early Work",
was presented at The Tate Britain Gallery in London.
Paul Neagu's "Abstract Gamma Hyphen"
exhibition will be on display through May 4, 2004. For further information
or visual material please contact Monica A. Rotaru at 212.767.0855
or info@gallery49.com