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Press release

From Andy Warhol to Kara Walker. Scenes from the Collection

28 February 2023 until 14 July 2024, ground level

Press release

Opening: 28 February 2023

Exhibition: 28 February 2023 until 14 July 2024

Press previews and interviews on request

 

Art can touch us, outrage us, delight us. It can make us doubt or dream, it can surprise and amaze us, and sometimes it leaves us with new questions. The exhibition of works from the Brandhorst Collection does all that. It works with contrasts and affinities, with historical correspondences and connecting themes. In doing so, it places classics of the collection from Andy Warhol and Alex Katz to Jean-Michel Basquiat in dialogue with spectacular new acquisitions from recent years: works by Jana Euler, Keith Haring, Louise Lawler, Pope.L, Kara Walker, and many more will be presented in the museum for the first time.

 

The new collection presentation kicks off with Andy Warhol and his fascination with portraits and iridescent self-depictions. The silkscreens and paintings he created from the 1960s depict celebrities such as Jackie Kennedy, Mick Jagger, Elvis Presley and Liz Taylor in bright colors and strong poses. But none of these stars’ biographies were unaffected by disaster, and this is reflected subtly in his work. Marilyn Monroe, perhaps the most famous icon in Warhol’s oeuvre, was immortalized by the artist in his painting “Round Marilyn” (1962) just after her death. But the exhibition shows that other artists also reacted to the figure, who oscillated between self-promotion and loneliness: Richard Avedon, for example, captures the moment after an official photo shoot when the star’s face reveals the sad emptiness behind the glamorous façade. Keith Haring transforms Monroe’s portrait into a grimace, while Sturtevant immerses it in deep black. Louise Lawler photographed Warhol’s “Round Marilyn” in 1988, when the work was put up for auction. By putting a price tag on it, Lawler reminds us that our view of art is never innocent, but is riddled with prestige and capital.

 

In the rooms that follow, monographic presentations alternate with thematic focuses. Alex Katz, Sturtevant and Jana Euler consider strategies of self-preservation; Robert Gober, Arthur Jafa, Louise Lawler and Bruce Nauman make overt and hidden violence visible; Jean-Michel Basquiat, Mike Kelley, Pope.L, Raymond Saunders and Kara Walker examine racism and social inequalities, while Thomas Eggerer, Jacqueline Humphries and Sigmar Polke reflect on forms of political protest.

 

In its multiplicity and variety, the exhibition shows that art is not only beautiful and entertaining. It is precisely in their relationship to social issues that artworks present us with very different perspectives and realities of life. And they challenge us to take a stand ourselves. As American artist Pope.L says: “I believe art re-ritualizes the everyday to reveal something fresh about our lives. This revelation is a vitality and it is a power to change the world.”

 

Curated by Achim Hochdörfer, Giampaolo Bianconi, Franziska Linhardt with Estelle Vallender

Press photos

Andy Warhol, Rolling Stones – Love You Live (Mick Jagger), 1975, UAB 540

Andy Warhol, Rolling Stones – Love You Live (Mick Jagger), 1975

Installation aus mehreren schmalen Regalbrettern mit Flaschen und Stofftieren

Pope.L, Party Room, 2001

Schwarzer Scherenschnitt, der eine verzerrtes Profil einer Person zeigt, die ihren Mund weit geöffnet hat und deren Haare aussehen, als würden sie im Wind wehen.

Kara Walker, Miss Rona’s Hello, 2020

An einer Wand lehnt ein Schild, das mit Streifen in roter Farbe bemalt ist.

Jacqueline Humphries, Untitled, 2008

Eine Gruppe von bunt gekleideten Tänzerinnen und Tänzern macht verschiedene Übungen

Alex Katz, Paul Taylor Dance Company, 1963-64

Malerei, die aus der Vogelperspektive eine Straße zeigt, auf der viele einheitlich gekleidete Menschen in orangenen Shirts und schwarzen Hosen entlanglaufen und Protestschilder hochhalten, die leer sind.

Thomas Eggerer, Corridor, 2020

Jean-Michel Basquiat 1960–1988, Ohne Titel, 1983, UAB 20aus der Sammlung Brandhorst

Jean-Michel Basquiat, Untitled, 1983

Große querformatige Malerei mit verzerrtem Gesicht, das gespiegelt ist und in der Bildmitte ein weißes Kreuz bildet

Jana Euler, Venice Void, 2022

Besucherin vor einem runden, goldenen Portrait von Marilyn Monroe des Künstlers Andy Warhol

Andy Warhol, Round Marilyn, 1962

Installation view Collection Museum Brandhorst

Zwei Besucher:innen vor einer Installation aus aufgereihten Flaschen in der Sammlungsausstellung im Museum Brandhorst München

Pope.L, Party Room, 2001

Detailaufnahme einer Installation aus mehreren schmalen Regalbrettern mit Flaschen und Stofftieren

Pope.L, Party Room, 2001

Besucherin vor großer schwarz-weiß Zeichnung im Museum Brandhorst München

Installation view Collection Museum Brandhorst

Installationsanssicht Sammlung Museum Brandhorst München

Installation view Collection Museum Brandhorst