Bourgeois (1911–2010), one of the most prominent and influential artists of the 20th century. A groundbreaking, award-winning artist, with a career spanning nearly seven decades, Bourgeois left behind a body of work rare in its material diversity and emotional intensity. She produced a rich symbolic and figurative language, transposing the human body with architecture, animals, objects, and plants. At the same time, she developed an eccentric form of abstraction which, in part, stemmed from her early studies of geometry. All of Bourgeois's images and forms articulate a range of universal human emotions, including desire, anxiety, loneliness, pain, and anger.</p><p>In 1982, Deborah Wye curated Bourgeois's first retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art, New York, which accelerated her acceptance and international success. A first retrospective in Europe, at Frankfurter Kunstverein, Germany, followed in 1989. Since then, large-scale solo exhibitions of her work have been staged in numerous museums the world over, and she participated in major international art events, including Documenta in Kassel (1992, 2002) and the Venice Biennale (1993, 1999), where she was awarded the Golden Lion for a living master of contemporary art. In 2000, at the onset of the new millennium, Bourgeois's site-specific installation I Do, I Undo, I Redo was created as a special commission for the Turbine Hall. This monumental work, along with her 30-foot spider sculpture, Maman (1999), inaugurated the opening of Tate Modern, London.</p><p>The exhibition at Gordon Gallery focuses on Bourgeois's prints, mainly those created in the last decade of her life. Throughout her extraordinarily fertile artistic career, printmaking was a mainstay of her oeuvre. From 1938, the year in which she made her first print—a small lithograph entitled St. Germain—to final works created close to her death, prints were a testimony of her creative process and various mindsets. From the 1940s, Bourgeois kept a small press at home, which enabled her to make prints independently, alongside her long collaborations with different print workshops in the United States and Europe. Though primarily focused on intaglio, she ultimately worked in several different printmaking techniques (including lithography, screenprint, and digital prints).</p><p>Printmaking, drawing, and their reciprocity formed the frame on which Bourgeois's well-known sculptural works evolved, as well as the Cell installations she created later in life. In 1994, a retrospective dedicated exclusively to Bourgeois's prints was staged, for the first time, at the Museum of Modern Art, New York. A second exhibition focused on the prints will open at MoMA in September 2017.</p><p>The works presented at Gordon Gallery explore quintessential motifs identified with Bourgeois: the mother-spider, the family, the passage of time, motherhood, and the natural world. Several pieces are printed on fabric, indicative of Bourgeois’s late work with clothing and textiles. In the last decade of her life, following the incorporation of her own clothes in sculptures and installations since 1996, Bourgeois began using old handkerchiefs, bedding, and clothing as grounds for her prints. Subsequently, she created printed fabric books made from pieces of cloth, worn and characterized by their domestic use.</p><p>Bourgeois’s late practice of working with fabric was connected to her first childhood experiences of art. As a young woman, she helped out in her family’s business—a tapestry weaving and restoration workshop—where she was often required to draw in the faded, blurred, or damaged elements of antique tapestries.</p><p>The title of the exhibition, "Pink Days / Blue Days," is taken from a sculpture of the same name, created in 1997, in which garments hang at various heights off of a central steel pole. It also alludes to the expression "pink days," written in pink over the pages of a music notebook, which Bourgeois made in 2008. For Bourgeois, the color pink represented femininity and happiness, while blue was symbolic of melancholy and depression. Blue could also represent the sky, which in turn expressed feelings of escape and of being overwhelmed.</p><p>The exhibition includes, among others, the seminal series Hours of the Day—25 printed, embroidered cotton panels, hung high up on the gallery walls like a frieze—as well as prints from the heartrending 1998 etching series Topiary: The Art of Improving Nature. A suite of nine compositions, it addresses the concept of pruning and felling the hollowed body as a therapeutic act, spurring it for budding and renewal, much like a plant. In some of the images, with a fine drypoint line, Bourgeois drew a headless body encased in the shell of its garments; its knee and shoulder joints are accentuated with pink stumps, which could be foci of regeneration for its missing parts. Against nature’s forces of destruction and decomposition, Bourgeois harnessed its opposite, introducing regeneration and eternal repetition as focal points of life and renewal.</p><p><br></p>" />

Louise Bourgeois: Pink Days / Blue Days

Sep 05, 2017 - Oct 28, 2017

Gordon Gallery is pleased to present, for the first time in Israel, a solo exhibition dedicated to French-American artist Louise Bourgeois (1911–2010), one of the most prominent and influential artists of the 20th century. A groundbreaking, award-winning artist, with a career spanning nearly seven decades, Bourgeois left behind a body of work rare in its material diversity and emotional intensity. She produced a rich symbolic and figurative language, transposing the human body with architecture, animals, objects, and plants. At the same time, she developed an eccentric form of abstraction which, in part, stemmed from her early studies of geometry. All of Bourgeois's images and forms articulate a range of universal human emotions, including desire, anxiety, loneliness, pain, and anger.

In 1982, Deborah Wye curated Bourgeois's first retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art, New York, which accelerated her acceptance and international success. A first retrospective in Europe, at Frankfurter Kunstverein, Germany, followed in 1989. Since then, large-scale solo exhibitions of her work have been staged in numerous museums the world over, and she participated in major international art events, including Documenta in Kassel (1992, 2002) and the Venice Biennale (1993, 1999), where she was awarded the Golden Lion for a living master of contemporary art. In 2000, at the onset of the new millennium, Bourgeois's site-specific installation I Do, I Undo, I Redo was created as a special commission for the Turbine Hall. This monumental work, along with her 30-foot spider sculpture, Maman (1999), inaugurated the opening of Tate Modern, London.

The exhibition at Gordon Gallery focuses on Bourgeois's prints, mainly those created in the last decade of her life. Throughout her extraordinarily fertile artistic career, printmaking was a mainstay of her oeuvre. From 1938, the year in which she made her first print—a small lithograph entitled St. Germain—to final works created close to her death, prints were a testimony of her creative process and various mindsets. From the 1940s, Bourgeois kept a small press at home, which enabled her to make prints independently, alongside her long collaborations with different print workshops in the United States and Europe. Though primarily focused on intaglio, she ultimately worked in several different printmaking techniques (including lithography, screenprint, and digital prints).

Printmaking, drawing, and their reciprocity formed the frame on which Bourgeois's well-known sculptural works evolved, as well as the Cell installations she created later in life. In 1994, a retrospective dedicated exclusively to Bourgeois's prints was staged, for the first time, at the Museum of Modern Art, New York. A second exhibition focused on the prints will open at MoMA in September 2017.

The works presented at Gordon Gallery explore quintessential motifs identified with Bourgeois: the mother-spider, the family, the passage of time, motherhood, and the natural world. Several pieces are printed on fabric, indicative of Bourgeois’s late work with clothing and textiles. In the last decade of her life, following the incorporation of her own clothes in sculptures and installations since 1996, Bourgeois began using old handkerchiefs, bedding, and clothing as grounds for her prints. Subsequently, she created printed fabric books made from pieces of cloth, worn and characterized by their domestic use.

Bourgeois’s late practice of working with fabric was connected to her first childhood experiences of art. As a young woman, she helped out in her family’s business—a tapestry weaving and restoration workshop—where she was often required to draw in the faded, blurred, or damaged elements of antique tapestries.

The title of the exhibition, "Pink Days / Blue Days," is taken from a sculpture of the same name, created in 1997, in which garments hang at various heights off of a central steel pole. It also alludes to the expression "pink days," written in pink over the pages of a music notebook, which Bourgeois made in 2008. For Bourgeois, the color pink represented femininity and happiness, while blue was symbolic of melancholy and depression. Blue could also represent the sky, which in turn expressed feelings of escape and of being overwhelmed.

The exhibition includes, among others, the seminal series Hours of the Day—25 printed, embroidered cotton panels, hung high up on the gallery walls like a frieze—as well as prints from the heartrending 1998 etching series Topiary: The Art of Improving Nature. A suite of nine compositions, it addresses the concept of pruning and felling the hollowed body as a therapeutic act, spurring it for budding and renewal, much like a plant. In some of the images, with a fine drypoint line, Bourgeois drew a headless body encased in the shell of its garments; its knee and shoulder joints are accentuated with pink stumps, which could be foci of regeneration for its missing parts. Against nature’s forces of destruction and decomposition, Bourgeois harnessed its opposite, introducing regeneration and eternal repetition as focal points of life and renewal.



Gordon Gallery is pleased to present, for the first time in Israel, a solo exhibition dedicated to French-American artist Louise Bourgeois (1911–2010), one of the most prominent and influential artists of the 20th century. A groundbreaking, award-winning artist, with a career spanning nearly seven decades, Bourgeois left behind a body of work rare in its material diversity and emotional intensity. She produced a rich symbolic and figurative language, transposing the human body with architecture, animals, objects, and plants. At the same time, she developed an eccentric form of abstraction which, in part, stemmed from her early studies of geometry. All of Bourgeois's images and forms articulate a range of universal human emotions, including desire, anxiety, loneliness, pain, and anger.

In 1982, Deborah Wye curated Bourgeois's first retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art, New York, which accelerated her acceptance and international success. A first retrospective in Europe, at Frankfurter Kunstverein, Germany, followed in 1989. Since then, large-scale solo exhibitions of her work have been staged in numerous museums the world over, and she participated in major international art events, including Documenta in Kassel (1992, 2002) and the Venice Biennale (1993, 1999), where she was awarded the Golden Lion for a living master of contemporary art. In 2000, at the onset of the new millennium, Bourgeois's site-specific installation I Do, I Undo, I Redo was created as a special commission for the Turbine Hall. This monumental work, along with her 30-foot spider sculpture, Maman (1999), inaugurated the opening of Tate Modern, London.

The exhibition at Gordon Gallery focuses on Bourgeois's prints, mainly those created in the last decade of her life. Throughout her extraordinarily fertile artistic career, printmaking was a mainstay of her oeuvre. From 1938, the year in which she made her first print—a small lithograph entitled St. Germain—to final works created close to her death, prints were a testimony of her creative process and various mindsets. From the 1940s, Bourgeois kept a small press at home, which enabled her to make prints independently, alongside her long collaborations with different print workshops in the United States and Europe. Though primarily focused on intaglio, she ultimately worked in several different printmaking techniques (including lithography, screenprint, and digital prints).

Printmaking, drawing, and their reciprocity formed the frame on which Bourgeois's well-known sculptural works evolved, as well as the Cell installations she created later in life. In 1994, a retrospective dedicated exclusively to Bourgeois's prints was staged, for the first time, at the Museum of Modern Art, New York. A second exhibition focused on the prints will open at MoMA in September 2017.

The works presented at Gordon Gallery explore quintessential motifs identified with Bourgeois: the mother-spider, the family, the passage of time, motherhood, and the natural world. Several pieces are printed on fabric, indicative of Bourgeois’s late work with clothing and textiles. In the last decade of her life, following the incorporation of her own clothes in sculptures and installations since 1996, Bourgeois began using old handkerchiefs, bedding, and clothing as grounds for her prints. Subsequently, she created printed fabric books made from pieces of cloth, worn and characterized by their domestic use.

Bourgeois’s late practice of working with fabric was connected to her first childhood experiences of art. As a young woman, she helped out in her family’s business—a tapestry weaving and restoration workshop—where she was often required to draw in the faded, blurred, or damaged elements of antique tapestries.

The title of the exhibition, "Pink Days / Blue Days," is taken from a sculpture of the same name, created in 1997, in which garments hang at various heights off of a central steel pole. It also alludes to the expression "pink days," written in pink over the pages of a music notebook, which Bourgeois made in 2008. For Bourgeois, the color pink represented femininity and happiness, while blue was symbolic of melancholy and depression. Blue could also represent the sky, which in turn expressed feelings of escape and of being overwhelmed.

The exhibition includes, among others, the seminal series Hours of the Day—25 printed, embroidered cotton panels, hung high up on the gallery walls like a frieze—as well as prints from the heartrending 1998 etching series Topiary: The Art of Improving Nature. A suite of nine compositions, it addresses the concept of pruning and felling the hollowed body as a therapeutic act, spurring it for budding and renewal, much like a plant. In some of the images, with a fine drypoint line, Bourgeois drew a headless body encased in the shell of its garments; its knee and shoulder joints are accentuated with pink stumps, which could be foci of regeneration for its missing parts. Against nature’s forces of destruction and decomposition, Bourgeois harnessed its opposite, introducing regeneration and eternal repetition as focal points of life and renewal.



Artists on show

Contact details

95 Ben Yehuda Street Tel Aviv, Israel 63401

What's on nearby

Amir Tomashov</a> collects remnants. Discarded objects, old pictures, and trash become material evidence of social and political processes – of what used to be and what is yet to come.</p><p>In Fragments of Future Past, Tomashov presents several series that add up to what we may call “an index” of a dystopian future: In his work, the disaster is perceived as a cyclical process, reflected in buildings and sites that have been radically transformed through acts of destruction and construction. His aesthetic style, characterized by perceptive and precise realist drawing, offers a critical look at the costs of globalization, gentrification, and the climate crisis through an architectural lens.</p><p>Tomashov’s practice is serial in nature, and he tends to work on several ongoing series over many years, adding new works each year. This exhibition features works from five series, including two new ones that are distinct in their aesthetic and shift away from his recognizable clinical, architectural, and meticulous style.</p><p>The exhibition is based on two guiding principles: the use of found objects as the painting support – charged materials imbued with their own history and character; and the use of generic images culled from social media like Instagram and Pinterest, stock photos, and mass-produced paintings.</p><p><br></p>" />
artist Ronen Zien</a> (b. 1990) returns to his home region in northern Israel. Zien, a native of Shfar’am and part of the Druze community, wanders through vibrant green fields near the Israel-Syria border. The northern border, scarred by significant geopolitical upheavals throughout the 20th century and current instability, serves as the canvas for his works. Since the establishment of the state of Israel, Zien’s family has been divided by this border – a reality that has profoundly shaped his world.</p><p>Zien employs photography and video to examine the reliability of memory. Using green screen (or chroma-key) – a special effects technique borrowed from film and television that allows figures filmed against a green background to be embedded into different settings – he inserts himself into old photographs. Yet Zien goes further, adding another dimension to memory construction: he enters the photographs physically, bringing them to life through his footsteps. Like the bodily sensation of returning to a familiar place – when one’s feet seem to lead the way instinctively – he forges a deep connection with the terrain, finding the confidence to wander without predetermined knowledge or direction.</p><p><br></p>" />
CCA Tel Aviv-Yafo </a> premieres Token, a new video work commissioned by the Center. Its starting point is a physical crisis characterized by extreme fatigue and an appearance of inner depletion. In long, almost static shots the camera lingers on human bodies lying in domestic interiors with minimal motion. The actors – Vardi’s friends and relatives – include some who witnessed her in a similar state of collapse and now reenact those moments, stepping into her shoes. For the first time, Vardi also appears in front of the camera, participating in the reenactment.</p><p>Another layer in Token examines the historical spectacle of bodily collapse during dance marathons, a phenomenon popular in the United States during the Great Depression. Participants in these grueling competitions danced in pairs for hours or even days at a time in front of an audience, to earn some money or a hot meal. Contestants were disqualified if both feet touched the floor simultaneously. They were allowed only 11 minutes of rest per hour, during which time many would collapse on nearby beds – an element that informed the structure and length of Vardi’s film. Alongside archival footage from these dance marathons and numerous reenactments staged by the artist, the film introduces another reference point: the socio-economic transition from the individual to the home as a unit, drawing parallels to the 2008 financial crisis caused by the collapse of the global housing market.&nbsp;</p><p>The loop becomes a structural and thematic device in the film, employing cinematic tropes such as cyclical time, repetitive imagery, rhythmic patterns, and circular camera movements. Against this backdrop of circuitousness – mimicking the operation of well-oiled systems and the flow of information – disruptions and glitches emerge, threatening to bring these systems to a halt, like a scratched record halting sound. In the technological realm of moving images, Vardi manipulates narrative pieces by stalling, stretching, shuffling, and reassembling them, prompting us to reconsider our perception of time and temporality.</p><p><br></p>" />
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