Arts Listings:
First Major Retrospective
in U.S. of the Work of Ghada Amer
Opens at Brooklyn Museum February 16, 2008
February 16 through October 19, 2008
Ghada Amer: Love Has No
End, the first major U.S. retrospective of
the renowned artist's work, will feature some
fifty pieces from every aspect of Amer's career
as a painter, sculptor, illustrator, performer,
garden designer, and installation artist.
These include the iconic Barbie Loves Ken,
Ken Loves Barbie (1995), The Reign of Terror
(2005), and Big Black Kansas City Painting
(2005), as well as a generous selection of
works never before exhibited in this country.
The exhibition will be on view from February
16 through October 19, 2008.
While she describes herself
as a painter and has won international recognition
for her abstract canvases embroidered with
erotic motifs, Ghada Amer is a multimedia
artist whose entire body of work is infused
with the same ideological and aesthetic concerns.
The submission of women to the tyranny of
domestic life, the celebration of female sexuality
and pleasure, the incomprehensibility of love,
the foolishness of war and violence, and an
overall quest for formal beauty, constitute
the territory that she explores and expresses
in her art.
Organized in a chronological
and thematic manner that reflects the stages
of Amer's career over the past two decades,
Love Has No End commences with her earliest
sketchbooks that illustrate the genesis of
her ideas about patterning and embroidery.
The exhibition continues with a series of
works from the artist's early "domestic
series," followed by works examining
fairy tales and other clichés about
gender. In addition to the more iconic erotic
paintings for which she is most famous, numerous
works devoted to world politics are exhibited,
including some of her more recent antiwar
pieces.
Ghada Amer was born in Cairo, Egypt, in 1963,
and moved to France at age eleven. She earned
a B.F.A. in 1986 and an M.F.A. in 1989 from
École Pilote Internationale d'Art et
de Recherche, Villa Arson, Nice, France. She
now lives and works in New York City. These
relocations are reflected in Amer's work.
Her painting is influenced by the idea of
shifting meanings and the appropriation of
the languages of abstraction and expressionism.
Her prints, drawings, and sculptures question
clichéd roles imposed on women; her
garden projects connect embroidery and gardening
as specifically "feminine" activities;
and her recent installations address the current
tumultuous political climate. Despite the
differences between her Islamic upbringing
and Western models of behavior, Amer's work
addresses universal problems, such as the
oppression of women, which are prevalent in
all cultures.
Ghada Amer: Love Has No End is organized for
the Brooklyn Museum by Maura Reilly, Curator
of the Elizabeth A. Sackler Center for Feminist
Art. A variety of education programs will
be presented in conjunction with the exhibition.
Visit www.brooklynmuseum.org for information.
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