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Claes Oldenburg and Coosje van Bruggen, Notebook Pages: A
Dialogue
October 2003 - July 2004
Spanning two decades, this show included 150 works on paper from the
artists' notebooks, which reflect the thoughts and conversations
from which their projects spring. This exhibition, organized by Marianne
Stockebrand, Director of the Chinati Foundation, with the artists, marks
the premiere exhibition of this body of work, and Chinati is pleased to
offer the public its first opportunity to see these important and personal
pieces.
Oldenburg and van Bruggen have collaborated on large-scale projects since
the mid-1970s. Their work reclaims quotidian objects, transforming them
into sculptures of great humor, poise, and whimsy. With their original
work, Oldenburg and van Bruggen have redefined public spaces across the
United States and abroad. The notebook drawings in this exhibition include
ink, watercolor, collage, as well as pencil sketches of works such as
Clothespin (1976), Philadelphia; Screwarch (1983), Rotterdam,
The Netherlands; Stake Hitch (1984), Dallas Art Museum, Texas;
and Monument to the Last Horse, (1991) Chinati Foundation, Marfa.
Also part of this show are exuberant drawings of seemingly animate food
on and off the plate, and studies for the proposed costumes and events
from their huge and ceremonial production Il Corso del Coltello
in Venice, Italy, which culminated with the gigantic Knifeship
(a red Swiss army knife with all parts in motion) making its way down
the grand canal.
Claes Oldenburg was born in 1920 in Stockholm, Sweden. Coosje v an Bruggen was born in 1942 in Groningen, The Netherlands. The artists live and work in New York. Recent museum exhibitions include Claes Oldenburg and Coosje van Bruggen, Castello di Rivoli Museum of Contemporary Art, Turin (2006-07); Claes Oldenberg with Coosje van Bruggen: Drawings 1992-1998, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York (2002); On the Roof, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York (2001); Claes Oldenberg, Coosje van Bruggen (sculptures, models and drawings together with the large scale project Lions Tail for the Piazza San Marco), Coner Museum, Venice, Italy (1999).
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