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Installation Views

Installation view, Nahmad Contemporary. Photographs by Tom Powel Imaging

Installation view, Nahmad Contemporary. Photographs by Tom Powel Imaging

Installation view, Nahmad Contemporary. Photographs by Tom Powel Imaging

Installation view, Nahmad Contemporary. Photographs by Tom Powel Imaging

Installation view, Nahmad Contemporary. Photographs by Tom Powel Imaging

Installation view, Nahmad Contemporary. Photographs by Tom Powel Imaging

Installation view, Nahmad Contemporary. Photographs by Tom Powel Imaging

Installation view, Nahmad Contemporary. Photographs by Tom Powel Imaging

Installation view, Nahmad Contemporary. Photographs by Tom Powel Imaging

Installation view, Nahmad Contemporary. Photographs by Tom Powel Imaging

Installation view, Nahmad Contemporary. Photographs by Tom Powel Imaging

Installation view, Nahmad Contemporary. Photographs by Tom Powel Imaging

Selected Works

Selected Works Thumbnails
Joseph Nahmad Contemporary _ Rudolf Stingel _ 2000-2003

RUDOLF STINGEL
Untitled (cinque), 2003
Styrofoam & silicon on canvas
78 x 59 in / 198 x 150 cm

Joseph Nahmad Contemporary _ Rudolf Stingel _ 2000-2003

RUDOLF STINGEL
Untitled, 2000
Styrofoam
Four panels:121.5 x 242.5 cm (47-7/8 x 95-1/2 in.) each

Joseph Nahmad Contemporary _ Rudolf Stingel _ 2000-2003

RUDOLF STINGEL
Untitled, 2000
Styrofoam, four panels
96 x 192 x 4 in / 243.8 x 487.7 x 10 cm

Joseph Nahmad Contemporary _ Rudolf Stingel _ 2000-2003

RUDOLF STINGEL
Untitled, 2002
Celotex insulation board, wood, aluminum
In two parts; 47.15 x 71.45 (119.7 x 180.8 cm) each

Joseph Nahmad Contemporary _ Rudolf Stingel _ 2000-2003

RUDOLF STINGEL
Untitled, 2003
Styrofoam and silicone on canvas
78 x 102 x 2.19 in / 198 x 259 x 5.5 cm

Joseph Nahmad Contemporary _ Rudolf Stingel _ 2000-2003

RUDOLF STINGEL
Untitled (in two parts), 2002
Celotex, wood and aluminum, in 2 parts
Overall: 94 1/2 by 92 1/2 in. 240 x 235 cm

Joseph Nahmad Contemporary _ Rudolf Stingel _ 2000-2003

RUDOLF STINGEL
Untitled, 2003
Celotex insulation board, wood, aluminum
46.35 x 63 in / 117.7 x 160 cm

Joseph Nahmad Contemporary _ Rudolf Stingel _ 2000-2003

RUDOLF STINGEL
Untitled (in two parts), 2002
Celotex insulation and aluminum foil on board
2 Parts: 47.1 x 74.5 in. / 119.7 x 189.2 cm. each

Joseph Nahmad Contemporary _ Rudolf Stingel _ 2000-2003

RUDOLF STINGEL
Untitled, 2001-02
Celotex insulation board, wood, aluminum
Two panels: 69.75 x 47.5 in each / 176.7 x 120.5 x 4.8 cm each

Joseph Nahmad Contemporary _ Rudolf Stingel _ 2000-2003

RUDOLF STINGEL
Untitled, 2003
Celotex tuff mounted on canvas
63.3 x 46.6 in / 160.8 x 118.4 cm

Joseph Nahmad Contemporary _ Rudolf Stingel _ 2000-2003

RUDOLF STINGEL
Untitled (cinque), 2003
Styrofoam & silicon on canvas
78 x 59 in / 198 x 150 cm

Joseph Nahmad Contemporary _ Rudolf Stingel _ 2000-2003

RUDOLF STINGEL
Untitled, 2000
Styrofoam
Four panels:121.5 x 242.5 cm (47-7/8 x 95-1/2 in.) each

Joseph Nahmad Contemporary _ Rudolf Stingel _ 2000-2003

RUDOLF STINGEL
Untitled, 2000
Styrofoam, four panels
96 x 192 x 4 in / 243.8 x 487.7 x 10 cm

Joseph Nahmad Contemporary _ Rudolf Stingel _ 2000-2003

RUDOLF STINGEL
Untitled, 2002
Celotex insulation board, wood, aluminum
In two parts; 47.15 x 71.45 (119.7 x 180.8 cm) each

Joseph Nahmad Contemporary _ Rudolf Stingel _ 2000-2003

RUDOLF STINGEL
Untitled, 2003
Styrofoam and silicone on canvas
78 x 102 x 2.19 in / 198 x 259 x 5.5 cm

Joseph Nahmad Contemporary _ Rudolf Stingel _ 2000-2003

RUDOLF STINGEL
Untitled (in two parts), 2002
Celotex, wood and aluminum, in 2 parts
Overall: 94 1/2 by 92 1/2 in. 240 x 235 cm

Joseph Nahmad Contemporary _ Rudolf Stingel _ 2000-2003

RUDOLF STINGEL
Untitled, 2003
Celotex insulation board, wood, aluminum
46.35 x 63 in / 117.7 x 160 cm

Joseph Nahmad Contemporary _ Rudolf Stingel _ 2000-2003

RUDOLF STINGEL
Untitled (in two parts), 2002
Celotex insulation and aluminum foil on board
2 Parts: 47.1 x 74.5 in. / 119.7 x 189.2 cm. each

Joseph Nahmad Contemporary _ Rudolf Stingel _ 2000-2003

RUDOLF STINGEL
Untitled, 2001-02
Celotex insulation board, wood, aluminum
Two panels: 69.75 x 47.5 in each / 176.7 x 120.5 x 4.8 cm each

Joseph Nahmad Contemporary _ Rudolf Stingel _ 2000-2003

RUDOLF STINGEL
Untitled, 2003
Celotex tuff mounted on canvas
63.3 x 46.6 in / 160.8 x 118.4 cm

Press Release

“Stingel’s practice is not painting as a medium, or painting for the sake of painting, or even the self-mocking of painting, but the celebration of painting as the derma, or skin, of reality, a very thin surface where we can leave our marks.”
–Francesco Bonami

Nahmad Contemporary is pleased to announce Rudolf Stingel: 2000-2003, featuring works from the pivotal Styrofoam and Celotex series. In the last quarter century, Italian-born Rudolf Stingel has emerged as one of the most radical artists of his time. Upon relocating to New York in 1987, he came to prominence during a decade when painting was famously declared dead. Despite the prevailing narrative of the time, Stingel never abandoned painting and instead dedicated his practice to probing the fundamental questions, possibilities, and limitations of the medium time and again, while simultaneously redefining the position of the viewer before a painting’s surface. His Styrofoam and Celotex series, which are the outcome of several major installations at the François Pinault Foundation, the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, the Whitney Museum of American Art, and the 2003 Venice Biennale, are arguably two of the artist’s most significant and daring bodies of work within his extraordinarily rich oeuvre. This exhibition presents a selection works rarely seen together, exploring the grittier underbelly of Stingel’s multi-faceted artistic output.

In the Styrofoam paintings, Stingel walks across panels of white Styrofoam laid on the floor wearing boots drenched in acid varnish or adheres fragments of the material to canvases covered in silicon. The subsequent chemical reaction eats away at the Styrofoam resulting in tracks of footprints and suspended glacial masses. By means of these alchemical processes, the painting’s surface transforms into a site of destruction and decay, with only its remnants evidencing the performative action that produced the work.Many of the conventions associated with traditional painting – from materiality, surface, authenticity, to mark-making – are destabilized in these works, in turn opening up new ways of thinking about the medium. The use of a cheap industrial material evokes the ethos of the Arte Povera movement, and its predecessors such as Piero Manzoni, who also utilized Styrofoam. Though these pictures are ultimately hung vertically on the wall, the footprints and imprints affirm an essentially horizontal orientation, akin to Robert Rauschenberg’s flatbed picture plane or Jackson Pollock’s drip paintings. Yet, in Stingel’s work, the heroic gesture of the artist’s hand is dissolved down to a mundane act, stepping outside of the painterly realm into the literal world.

Stingel pushes the technique of using destructive forces as a catalyst for creation even further in the Celotex works, in which the interior of a space is entirely covered with aluminum insulation paneling known as Celotex Tuff-R. Over the course of an exhibition, viewers enter the all-over reflective space and are given free reign to etch their names, thoughts, and doodles onto the construction material, transforming the pristine silver surface into yet another locus of destruction. The vandalistic aspect calls to mind the slashed canvases of Lucio Fontana, the gouged surfaces of Jean Dubuffet’s paintings, and the graffiti elements embedded in Cy Twombly’s work. By transferring the task of mark-making to the public, however, Stingel again dispels the aura of the artist’s hand heralded by Abstract Expressionism. The participatory function of the viewer allows Stingel to, at once, expand the role of collaboration in the making of an artwork as well as shift the way one experiences a work of art. By virtue of its all-encompassing installation, the Celotex work is subsumed as part of the architecture, culminating in a dislocation of painting. Then, to further complicate matters, he takes portions of these defaced walls and subsequently presents them as new autonomous works. Six such examples are presented in this exhibition.

Nahmad Contemporary is pleased to present these two bodies of work in dialogue as a platform to underline their exceptional vitality and uncanny capacity to make the viewer aware of his or her position in front of the unique and symbolic space represented within a painting. Stingel’s capacity to accept the ephemeral reality of a given surface and the menacing confrontation with any possible viewer within these series of works furnishes his vision with a unique strength, still unmatched by any contemporary artist today.

On the occasion of this exhibition, Nahmad Contemporary will produce an accompanying catalogue with a new text by Francesco Bonami, the curator who, perhaps more than anyone else, has followed and examined Stingel’s work from his ground-breaking 1991 exhibition at the Daniel Newburg Gallery to the present.