ROBERT MAPPLETHORPE INTRODUCTION OF WORKS - Galerie Thomas ...
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ROBERT MAPPLETHORPE INTRODUCTION OF WORKS • Self Portrait, 1985, photograph, silver gelatin print on paper 38.7 x 38.7 cm | 15 1/8 x 15 1/8 in
Robert Mapplethorpe (b. 1946 New York; d. 1989 Boston) was an acclaimed photographer, most noted for his black and white portraits of celebrities, flowers, as well as female and male nudes. Initially creating collages using found photographs, objects, and painting, Mapplethorpe turned to photography in the early 1970s; through which—using a Polaroid SX-70 camera—he quickly became known for the portraits he took of his wide circle of friends, including famous artists, musicians, porn stars, and socialites. Mapplethorpe’s diverse oeuvre—homoerotic images, floral still-life photographs, pictures of children, commissioned portraits, and mixed-media sculpture—is united by the consistency of his approach and technique. Mapplethorpe’s photographs offer a seemingly endless gradation of blacks and whites, shadow and light. Regardless of their specific subject, his images combine both provocation and elegance. Mapplethorpe participated in Documenta in 1977 and 1982. His work has been shown in solo exhibitions worldwide, including the LACMA and J. Paul Getty Museum (2016), Musée des Beaux-Arts de Montréal (2016), Museum of Contemporary Art Kiasma (2015), Tate Modern (2008; 2014), Grand Palais (2014), Modern Art Oxford (2009), Whitney Museum of American Art (2008), MoMA P.S.1 (2006; 2008), the National Museum in Stockholm (2007), the Salomon R. Guggenheim Museum (2005), Museo Reina Sofía (2006), the Tel Aviv Museum of Art (2004), FRAC, Paris (2003). His work can be found in numerous public collections, including the Art Institute of Chicago, Australian National Gallery, Boston Museum of Fine Arts, the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington D.C., Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, Frankfurter Kunstverein, Hara Museum of Contemporary Art, the International Center of Photography in New York, Israel Museum, Madison Art Center, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Museum Ludwig, the Museum of Fine Arts in Houston, MoMA, New Orleans Museum of Art, Centre Georges Pompidou, SFMOMA, Stedelijk Museum, Victoria & Albert Museum. Shortly before his untimely death, Mapplethorpe established The Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation, dedicated to the promotion of his work and to funding medical research in the fight against HIV/AIDS. Friends and Acquaintances Exhibition at Galerie Thomas 2,3 Schulte, 2011
PORTRAITS While Mapplethorpe’s images of the male and female body are associated with ideals of beauty, his portraits are expressions of the identity and individuality of the respective sitter. In one of the four portraits that Robert Mapplethorpe took of Andy Warhol during his lifetime, Warhol is seen leaning his right shoulder against the same white wall, his whole body facing the camera, with his hands held rather stiffly in front of him. Although this head shot focuses more intently on Warhol’s face, the artist also wears the same blank, uninterested expression in the other photographs from the shoot. In his famous portrait of the French-American artist Louise Bour- geois she is shown from her waist up with her body in three quarter profile, and her face turned towards the camera. She has one of her sculptures tucked under her arm, holding it in place with her hand. This phallic shaped sculpture, Fillette, which translates as “little girl” in French, is a plaster work covered in latex, which was made fourteen years earlier. Bourgeois smiles somewhat mischievously at the camera. Like Mapplethorpe, Bourgeois often made art that was sexually explicit and she identified with the connection made between Mapplethorpe and herself. Amidst the many portraits that Mapplethorpe took, a special role is played by singer-songwriter Patti Smith, whom Mapplethorpe por- trayed multiple times during their lifelong friendship. Indeed, apart from his self-portraits, Smith was Mapplethorpe’s most photographed subject. In 1988, Mapplethorpe also shot the cover for Smith’s album Dream of Life. Andy Warhol, 1983 Photograph, gelatin silver print on paper 4,5 47.6 x 37.7 cm | 18 13/16 x 14 7/8 in
Meredith Monk, 1988 Photograph, gelatin silver print on paper 37.2 x 37.4 cm | 14 2/3 x 14 2/3 in Philipp Glass and Robert Wilson, 1976 Photograph, gelatin silver print on paper 34.1 x 34.1 cm | 13 2/5 x 13 2/5 in Louise Bourgeois, 1982 Photograph, silver gelatin print on paper 37.5 x 37.4 cm | 14 2/3 x 14 2/3 in 6,7
Susan Sontag, 1984 Truman Capote, 1981 Photograph, silver gelatin print on paper Photograph, silver gelatin print on paper 34.9 × 34.9 cm | 13 3/4 × 13 3/4 in 8,9 38 x 38 cm | 15 x 15 in
Francesca Thyssen, 1981 Patti Smith, 1978 Photograph, gelatin silver print on paper Photograph, gelatin silver print on paper 50.8 x 40.6 cm | 20 x 16 in 10,11 47.7 x 37.6 cm | 18 13/16 x 14 7/8 in
SELF-PORTRAITS Within the genre of the portrait, the self portrait is perhaps the most complex sub-category, because it brings the artist and the sitter into one with the allure of a private diary. Historically, the self-portrait is linked to artistic identity, experimentation with techniques and autobiography. Mapplethorpe’s self-portraits contain all of these elements: his early po- laroids are his first experiments with the self-portrait and his exploration of photography; his works from the late 1970s to the mid 1980s sur- vey different personas and ideas of identity, while his late self-portraits are more autobiographical and concerned with questions of existence. In his self-portraits Mapplethorpe takes on different personas, includ- ing knife-wielding hoodlum, a revolutionary and ultimate bad-boy. He also took on the personas of devil, sexual-provocateur and transvestite amongst others; all expressions of the different facets of his identity. In 1986, Mapplethorpe was diagnosed with AIDS, the syndrome caused by HIV. The HIV/AIDS pandemic was one of the most significant international events in the 1980s and had affected the lives of many in Mapplethorpe’s immediate circle. At the time, most of those diagnosed with the disease did not survive more than two years. Mapplethorpe’s self-portraiture towards the end of his life reflected his diminishing health, his search for catharsis and his mortality. In a late self-portrait from 1988, Mapplethorpe is seated facing straight ahead, as if he were looking death in the face—as if he were confronting it. The skull-headed cane that he holds in his right hand reinforces this reading. Mapplethorpe is wearing black, so that his head floats free, disembodied, surrounded by darkness. Using a shallow depth of field, Mapplethorpe photographs his head very slightly out of focus, perhaps to suggest his gradual fading away. Pictures / Self Portrait, 1977 Photograph, silver gelatin print on paper 12,13 35.2 x 34.6 cm | 13 7/8 x 13 5/8 in
Self Portrait, 1988 Self Portrait, 1973 Photograph, gelatin silver print on paper Photograph, gelatin silver print on paper 57.7 x 48.1 cm | 22 3/4 x 19 in 14,15 47.6 × 37.5cm | 18 4/5 × 14 11/16 in
Self Portrait, 1983 Photograph, silver gelatin print on paper 37.4 x 37.5 cm | 14 2/3 x 14 2/3 in Self Portrait, 1980 Photograph, silver gelatin print on paper 35.2 x 35.2 cm | 13 1/2 x 13 1/2 in 16,17
FETISH AND S&M Robert Mapplethorpe was gay and actively engaged in New York’s S&M scene. During the mid to late 1970s, he frequented many gay bars and clubs in the Meatpacking district of New York City including the Mineshaft, at the time considered the “definitive S&M club.” Through his photographs Mapplethorpe intended to bestow dignity and beauty upon a subject that was considered outside accepted norms of behaviour. In the portrait of Nick Biens, whom Robert Mapplethorpe met in 1977, Biens sits in three-quarter profile with his head turned to face the camera. He is topless but holds his studded leather jacket, which is slung over his left shoulder, with clasped hands. The top of his leather trousers and a metallic belt can be seen at the bottom edge of the image. Biens wears a strong yet sullen expression and boasts a dark, trimmed beard and two visible tattoos: a flaming skull on his forehead and a profile head and neck of a man wearing a leather cap on his left bicep. He casts a shadow on the white wall behind him that emphasises his square jaw. While Mapplethorpe was particularly interested in taking photo- graphs of sadomasochistic sexual practices, he also portrayed the indi- viduals who practised them. The latter were considered relatively tame in S&M circles, and Biens himself referred to them as being an “artsified version of S&M.” However, some, especially the thirteen pictures selected by Mapplethorpe for his X-portfolio, also showed individuals involved in actual S&M scenes. Patrice, NYC (detail), 1977 Photograph, silver gelatin print on paper 18,19 34.3 x 34.3 cm | 13 1/2 x 13 1/2 in
Clothespinned Mouth, 1978 Nick, 1977 Photograph, silver gelatin print on paper Photograph, silver gelatin print on paper 34 × 34.1 cm | 13 1/2 x 13 1/2 in 20,21 34.1 × 34.2 cm | 13 1/2 x 13 1/2 in
Joe, NYC, 1978 Photograph, silver gelatin print on paper 34.3 x 34.3 cm | 13 1/2 x 13 1/2 in Helmut, NYC, 1978 Photograph, silver gelatin print on paper 34.1 × 34.2 cm | 13 1/2 x 13 1/2 in Brian Ridley and Lyle Heeter, 1979 Photograph, silver gelatin print on paper 34.1 × 34.1 cm | 13 1/2 x 13 1/2 in 22,23
FLOWERS In color or black-and-white, Robert Mapplethorpe’s flowers again and again play the role of seduction, an embrace, an orgasm. As though the subject had never been fully exhausted, the artist appropriates the codes of a traditional artistic genre, to better spin the metaphor: formal perfection of the staging, absolute mastery of the play of light and shadow, clinical precision of the framing... everything happens as though still life had reached its most accomplished expression. It is far from the exercise of style à la Edward Steichen, the botanical exaltation à la Imogen Cunningham, or the scientific compilation à la Karl Blossfeldt. Here, the flower is only a pretext: “I love my flower photos more than I love real flowers.” Narcissus is the reflection of Narcissus that Mapplethorpe contemplates in these anthropomorphic petals. His nature photography is a major contrast to his usual leather- and chain- clad subjects, and critics praised his ability to bring sex appeal to any subject—no matter how ordinary it may seem, since in art, a flower is never just a flower. They are symbols, like the 17th Century Flemish still-lifes depicting banquets and bouquets that were not only com- memorations of luxuries; they were a memento mori, a reminder that every flower lilts and all feasts come to an end. Flower Arrangement, 1984 Platinum print on paper 24,25 59.5 x 49.5 cm | 23 1/2 x 19 1/2 in
Gardenia, 1987 Tulips, 1988 Photograph, silver gelatin print on paper Photograph, silver gelatin print on paper 48.8 x 48.8 cm | 19 1/4 x 19 1/4 in 26,27 48.8 x 48.8 cm | 19 1/4 x 19 1/4 in
Calla Lilies, 1985 Tuberose, 1977 Photograph, gelatin silver print on paper Photograph, gelatin silver print on paper 50.8 x 40.6 cm | 20 x 16 in 28,29 34.3 x 34.3 cm | 13 1/2 x 13 1/2 in
Double Jack in the Pulpit, 1988 Photograph, Dye-transfer print on paper 56.5 x 57.1 cm | 22 1/4 x 22 31/64 in Bird of Paradise, 1979 Photograph, silver gelatin print on paper 35.1 × 35.5 cm | 13 13/16 × 14 in Orchid, 1986 Photograph, silver gelatin print on paper 48.9 x 48.7 cm | 19 1/4 x 19 3/16 in 30,31
MALE NUDES While the portrait is associated with identity and individuality, images of the body are associated with ideals of beauty. Robert Mapplethorpe’s male nudes demonstrate the artist’s concern for portraying the sculp- tural beauty of the human form. Balance and harmony are thus key to Mapplethorpe’s nudes. The artist consciously composes the images to emphasise their structure and geometry. The contrasts of light and shade appear to give the sitter’s body the permanence and lustre of a classical bronze statue. Mapplethorpe’s sitters were often athletic men including models, dancers and bodybuilders, all with muscular and well-defined bodies. The images include photographs of fragmented bodies—a torso, an extended arm, buttocks and thighs. Mapplethorpe once stated: “I zero in on the body part that I consider the most perfect part in that particular model.” According to his biographer, Patricia Morrisroe, Mapplethorpe began to photograph black men around 1979. As Morrisroe writes, the artist found that “he could extract a greater richness from the colour of their skin.” In particular, the tonal range between the highlights and the shad- ows was more dramatic. Mapplethorpe’s decision to photograph black men made him more particular about the quality of his photographic prints than he had previously been. Taking a cue from classical sculpture, he expected black skin to approximate the colour of bronze and instructed his printer to selectively darken his pictures accordingly. Torso (Donald Cann) (detail), 1982 Photograph, silver gelatin print on paper 32,33 48.7 × 38.8 cm | 19 3/16 × 15 1/4 in
Phillip, 1979 Photograph, silver gelatin print on paper 35 x 36 cm | 13 13/16 x 14 1/4 in Phillip, 1979 Photograph, silver gelatin print on paper 36 x 35 cm | 14 1/4 x 13 13/16 in 34,35
Marty Gibson, 1982 Photograph, silver gelatin print on paper 39 x 38 cm | 15 5/16 x 15 in Bill Joulis, 1977 Photograph, silver gelatin print on paper 35 x 35.5 cm | 13 13/16 x 14 in Tony Hill, 1978 Photograph, silver gelatin print on paper 35.5 x 35 cm | 14 x 13 13/16 in 36,37
Ken Moody and Robert Sherman, 1984 Daniel, N.Y.C., 1979 Photograph, silver gelatin print on paper Photograph, silver gelatin print on paper 49.4 × 50.2 cm | 19 7/16 × 19 3/4 in 38,39 19.1 × 18.9 cm | 7 1/2 × 7 7/16 in
SCULPTURES Although he had studied painting and sculpture at the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn until 1970, it was in photography that Robert Mapplethorpe gave substance to his fantasies of matter. In an interview published in 1988, he mused: “If I had been born a hundred or two hundred years ago, I would probably have been a sculptor, but photography is a quick way of seeing and sculpting.” Influenced by the Italian masters of the Cinquecento—one thinks in particular of The Slave (1974), an explicit homage to Michelangelo’s Dying Slave (1513)—in his early days, Mapplethorpe sublimated the canonical plastic arts through the athlete Ken Moody, the dancer Derrick Cross, and the bodybuilder Lisa Lyon, in compositions flirting with trompe l’oeil: The energetic postures adopted by his models, the outrageous contraction of their muscles, still underlined by a clear obscure scholar, celebrate the sculptural quality of the nude form. At the end of his career, Mapplethorpe returned to the glorified divinities of his personal pantheon: Eros, Mercury, Hermes... as though, through the images of ancient statues, he was seeking to ensure his posterity in the great history of art. Installation at Museo Madre, 40,41 Naples, 2019
Pan Head, 1977 Sleeping Cupid, 1988 Photograph, silver gelatin print on paper Photograph, silver gelatin print on paper 35.6 × 35.2 cm | 14 × 13 7/8 in 42,43 48.9 x 48.9 cm | 19 11/16 x 19 11/16 in
FEMALE NUDES In 1980, Robert Mapplethorpe met Lisa Lyon, the first World Women’s Body Building Champion. They worked together over the next few years creating various portraits and figure studies including both full and frag- mented body images. In these photographs, which were published in a book in 1983, Lady: Lisa Lyon, Lyon took on different guises and played with the idea of different “types“ of women, depicting stereotypical fem- ininity alongside rippling muscles and body hair. Commenting on their collaboration in an interview, Mapplethorpe once stated: “Lisa Lyon re- minded me of Michelangelo’s subjects, because he did muscular women.” Another important model whom Mapplethorpe captured repeatedly was Patti Smith. Both Patti Smith and Lisa Lyon could be described as androgynous and allowed Mapplethorpe to explore gender stereotypes and the intermediate space between femininity and masculinity. Lisa Lyon, 1981 Photograph, silver gelatin print on paper 46,47 45.1 × 35 cm | 17 3/4 × 13 3/4 in
Lisa Lyon, 1980 Lisa Lyon, 1982 Photograph, silver gelatin print on paper Photograph, silver gelatin print on paper 40.6 x 50.8 cm | 16 x 20 in 48,49 38.4 × 38 cm | 15 1/8 × 14 15/16 in
Lisa Lyon, 1982 Lisa Lyon, 1982 Photograph, silver gelatin print on paper Photograph, silver gelatin print on paper 38.3 × 38.5 cm | 15 1/16 × 15 3/16 in 50,51 38.2 × 38.5 cm | 15 1/16 × 15 3/16 in
BIOGRAPHY WORKS IN PUBLIC COLLECTIONS Born The Art Institute of Chicago, USA 1946 in Floral Park (Queens), New York, USA Australian National Gallery, Canberra, Australia Bank of America Collection, San Francisco, USA Died Boston Museum of Fine Arts, USA 1989 in Boston, USA Center for Creative Photography, University of Arizona, USA Chase Manhattan Bank Collection, New York, USA Education Chrysler Museum, Norfolk, USA 1963-70 Pratt Institute Brooklyn, New York, USA Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., USA Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, USA Key biographical dates Frankfurter Kunstverein, Frankfurt, Germany 1967 befriends Patti Smith George Eastman House, Rochester, New York, USA 1971 becomes aquainted with John McKendry, Curator of Prints and Photography Guggenheim Museum, New York, USA at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York Hara Museum of Contemporary Art, Tokyo, Japan 1986 diagnosed with HIV/AIDS High Museum of Art, Atlanta, USA 1988 established the Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation International Center of Photography, New York, USA Israel Museum, Jerusalem, Israel La Jolla Museum of Contemporary Art, USA Madison Art Center, USA Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA Museum Ludwig, Cologne, Germany Museum of Art, Norman, USA Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, USA Museum of Modern Art, New York, USA New Orleans Museum of Art, USA Pompidou Centre, Paris, France Portland Center for the Visual Arts, USA San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, USA Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam, The Netherlands Victoria & Albert Museum, London, England Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, USA 52,53
SELECTED SOLO EXHIBITIONS 2011 2020 Galería Elvira González, Madrid, Spain Robert Mapplethorpe Selected by Robert Wilson & XYZ Portfolios, Galerie Thomas Schulte, Berlin, Germany En Plein Air, Galerie Stefan Roepke, Cologne, Germany 50 Americans, Sean Kelly Gallery, New York, USA 2019 Friends and Acquaintances, Galerie Thomas Schulte, Berlin, Germany Mapplethorpe, Salomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, USA Retrospektive, C/O Berlin, Berlin, Germany Night Work (curated by Scissor Sisters), Alison Jacques Gallery, London, England 2018 Portraits, San Jose Museum of Art, San Jose, USA Choreography for an Exhibition, Madre Museum, Naples, Italy Pictures, Serralves Foundation Museum of Contemporary Art, Porto, Portugal 2010 Photography with Sculpture, Towner, Eastbourne, England 2017 Eros and Order, Malba - Fundación Costantini, Gallery 5, Buenos Aires, Argentina Robert Mapplethorpe – a perfectionist, Kunsthal Rotterdam, Netherlands Eine Retrospektive, NRW-Forum Kultur und Wirtschaft, Düsseldorf, Germany Objects, Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac, Paris, France 2009 2016 A Season in Hell, Alison Jacques Gallery, London, England Galleri Brandstrup, Oslo, Norway Portraits: Robert Mapplethorpe, Center for Creative Photography, Tucson, USA XYZ, Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac, Paris, France Centro de Arte Contemporáneo (CAC) de Málaga, Malaga, Spain The Perfect Medium, LACMA & J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles, USA Polaroids And Silver Prints In Context, Galerie Stefan Röpke, Cologne, Germany Galleria Franco Noero, Turin, Italy Es Baluard Museu d’Art Modern i Contemporani de Palma, Palma de Mallorca, Spain Focus: Perfection, Musée des Beaux-Arts Montréal, Canada TR3 Gallery and National Gallery, Ljubljana, Slovenia The Perfection in Form, Galleria dell’Accademia, Florence, Italy 2015/16 After The Moment, CAC Lois & Richard Rosenthal Center for Contemporary Art, Cincinnati, USA 2008 The Magic in the Muse, The Bowes Museum, Durham, England Polaroids: Mapplethorpe, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, USA; travelled to Modern Art, Oxford, England; Henry Art Gallery, Seattle, USA 2015 Lisa, Milton, Thomas & Ken, Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac, Paris, France Kiasma-Museum of Contemporary Art, Helsinki, Finland Robert Mapplethorpe - Works 1975-1988, Mai 36 Galerie, Zürich, Switzerland Robert Miller Gallery, New York, USA Galería Pepe Cobo, Lima, Peru 2007 Women, Galerie Stefan Röpke, Cologne, Germany 2014 VANITAS, Galería Pepe Cobo, Madrid, Spain Sell the Public Flowers, Galerie Thomas Schulte, Berlin, Germany Robert Mapplethorpe’s Y Portfolio, MIT List Visual Arts Centre, Cambridge, USA Photographs and Polaroids, Charles Riva Collection, Brussels, Belgium Artist Rooms: Robert Mapplethorpe, Tate Modern, London, England 2006 The Grunwald Gallery of Art, Bloomington, USA Stadtgalerie Klagenfurt, Austria Grand Palais, Paris, France Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, Edinburgh, Scotland Mapplethorpe-Rodin, Musée Rodin, Paris, France 2005 2012 Robert Mapplethorpe and the Classical Tradition, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, USA PURE: Robert Mapplethorpe, Mai 36 Galerie, Zurich, Switzerland Neoclassicism, Sean Kelly, New York, USA Ludwig Museum, Museum of Contemporary Art, Budapest, Hungary Allison Jacques Gallery, London Xyz, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles, USA Tra Antico e Moderno, Una Antologia, Promotrice delle Belle Arti, Turin, Italy In Focus: Robert Mapplethorpe, J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles, USA Robert Mapplethorpe (curated by Hedi Slimane), Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac, Paris, France Robert Mapplethorpe: Porträts und Erotik, Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac, Prien am Chiemsee, Germany 2011/12 Forma Foundation for Photography, Milan, Italy 2004 The Onassis Cultural Centre, Athens, Greece Pictures Pictures, Marc Selwyn Fine Art, Los Angeles, USA Robert Mapplethorpe (curated by Sofia Coppola), Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac, Paris, France Robert Mapplethorpe and the Classical Tradition, Deutsche Guggenheim, Berlin, Germany Nine Favourites, Galerie Thomas Schulte, Berlin 54,55
2003 1995 Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia Robert Mapplethorpe Retrospective, WA Art Gallery, Perth, Australia Eye to Eye: Robert Mapplethorpe selected by Cindy Sherman, Sean Kelly Gallery, New York, USA Olga Korper Gallery, Toronto, Canada 1993/94 Robert Mapplethorpe: Sculptures and hand painted photographs, asperyjacques, London, England Museo Pecci, Prato, Italy Flower Photographs, Baldwin Gallery, Aspen, USA 1992 2002 Mapplethorpe versus Rodin, Kunsthalle Dusseldorf, Dusseldorf, Germany Flowers, Galerie Stefan Röpke, Cologne, Germany Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Humlebaek, Denmark Galerie Thomas Schulte, Berlin, Germany Museo de Monterrey, Monterrey, Mexico Robert Mapplethorpe: The Portfolios, Xavier Hufkens, Brussel, Belgium Robert Mapplethorpe Retrospective, Tokyo Metropolitan Teien Art Museum, Tokyo; travelled to the Contem- Robert Mapplethorpe Retrospective, Museum of Contemporary Art, Sapporo, Japan porary Art Gallery, Art Tower Mito, Ibaraki, Japan; the Museum of Kamakura; the Nagoya City Art Museum; the Modern Art Museum of Shiya, USA 2001 I.C.A.C. Weston Gallery, Tokyo, Japan Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac-Salzburg, Salzburg, Austria Senior & Shopmaker, New York, USA 1991 Robert Mapplethorpe: Early Works, Robert Miller Gallery, New York, USA 2000 Galeria Weber, Alexander y Cobo, Madrid, Spain Cheim& Read, New York, USA Lady, Ace Gallery, Los Angeles, USA Aktionsforum Praterinsel, Munich, Germany Musee d’Art Contemporain, Fondation Edelman, Pully, Lausanne, Switzerland Senior & Shopmaker, New York, USA Galerie Franck + Schulte, Berlin, Germany Patricia Laligant Photography, New York, USA Fifty One Fine Art Photography, Antwerpen, Netherlands 1990 Martina Hamilton Gallery, New York, USA 1999 Hamiltons Gallery, London, England 1989 Andrea Rosen, New York, USA Bridgewater/ Lustberg, New York, USA Fay Gold Gallery, Atlanta, USA The Modernist Still Life-Photographed, University of Missouri-Kansas City, Kansas City, USA Galerie Thomas Schulte, Berlin, Germany Betsy Rosenfield Gallery, Chicago, USA Blum Helman, Los Angeles, Inc., Santa Monica, USA 1998 Sala D’Ercole di Palazzo D’Accursio, Bologna, Italy Karen Mc Cready Fine Art, New York, USA Baudoin Lebon, Paris, France Dorothy Blau Gallery, Inc., Miami, USA The Perfect Moment, Institute of Contemporary Arts, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, USA; travelled Cheim & Read, New York, USA to Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago; Washington Project for the Arts, Washington D.C.; Wadsworth Houldsworth Fine Art, London, England Athenum, Hartford; University Art Museum, University of California, Berkeley; Contemporary Arts Center, Xavier Hufkens, Bruxelles, Belgium Cincinnati; Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston, USA 1997 Galley Galgano, Los Angeles, USA Projects- Cortland- Jessup, New York, USA Yancey Richardson, New York, USA 123 Watts, New York, USA Staatsgalerie Stuttgart, Stuttgart, Germany Rhona Hoffmann Gallery, Chicago, USA Fay Gold Gallery, Atlanta, USA 1996 Children, Robert Miller Gallery, New York, USA Galerie Stefan Röpke, Cologne, Germany Gallery of Photography, Dublin, Ireland Hayward Gallery on the South Bank, London, England 56,57
SELECTED GROUP EXHIBITIONS 2009 2019 Sterling Ruby & Robert Mapplethorpe, Xavier Hufkens, Brüssel Studio Photography: 1887–2019, Simone Lee Gallery, New York, USA Something for Everyone, Hamiltons Gallery, London, England Trust Me, Galerie Martin van Zomeren, Amsterdam, Netherlands 2018 Black Cube Gallery, Sant Antoni Maria Claret, Barcelona, Spain DRAG: Self-portraits and Body Politics, Hayward Gallery, London, England Deadline, Musée d´Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris, MAM/ARC, Paris, France Black & White, Museum Kunstpalast, Düssseldorf, Germany Shake It: An Instant History of the Polaroid, Pump House Gallery, London, England Contemporary art is just easy as pie, Art Tower Mito ATM, Mito, Japan 2016 Big Shots: Andy Warhol, Celebrity Culture, and the 1980s, Spencer Museum of Art, Lawrence, USA Warhol & Mapplethorpe: Guise & Dolls, Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art, Hartford, USA MESSIAHS, MODEM Centre for Modern and Contemporary Arts, Debrecen, Hungary Mapplethorpe + Munch, Munchmuseet, Oslo, Norway Self-Portraits, Skarstedt Fine Art, New York, USA Selected works from the r/e collection, Espacio artkunstarte, Galería Arnés y Röpke, Madrid, Spain Ingres et les modernes, Musée Ingres Montauban, France The Figure and Dr. Freud, Haunch of Venison, New York, USA 2014/15 Das Portrait. Fotografie als Bühne, Kunsthalle Wien, Vienna, Austria One Way: Peter Marino, Bass Museum of Art, Miami, USA Le Temps Emprunté / The borrowed time, Museum of Modern Art Dubrovnik, Croatia Toward Abstraction: Photographs and Photograms, The de Young Museum San Francisco, USA 2014 Zum Strand / To the beach, Galerie Stefan Röpke, Cologne, Germany Falling Into Darkness..., Galerie Stefan Röpke, Cologne, Germany Photo-OP, Russell Bowman Art Advisory, Chicago, IL, USA A Inusitada, Museu de Arte de São Paulo Assis Chateaubriand, São Paulo, Brazil en todas as partes. políticas da diversidade sexual na arte, CGAC, Santiago de Compostela, Spain Better With Age: Celebrating 35 Years, Corkin Gallery, Toronto, Canada sh[OUT]: Contemporary art and human rights, GoMA – Gallery of Modern Art, Glasgow, Scottland Artificial Light: Flash Photography in the Twentieth Century, Philadelphia Museum of Art, USA Fatal Attraction: Diana and Actaeon – The Forbidden Gaze, Compton Verney, Warwickshire, England la piel traslúcida. Obras de la colección Iberdrola, Torre Iberdrola, Bilbao, Spain The Fallen Angels, Watari Museum of Contemporary Art, Tokyo, Japan Garden Party, Nassau County Museum of Art, Roslyn Harbor, New York, USA Fotofiesta, Galleri S.E., Bergen, Norway 1984?, Mai 36 Galerie, Zurich, Switzerland Tresures of Gay Art, The Leslie/Lohman Gay Art Foundation, New York, USA Reproductibilitat 1.1, Es Baluard Museu d’Art Modern, Palma de Mallorca, Spain Costanti del classico nell’arte del XX e XXI secolo, Fondazione Puglisi Cosentino, Palazzo Valle Catania, Italy Nudes, Galeria Fortes Vilaça, São Paulo, Brasil 2012/13 This is Not a Fashion Photograph, ICP – International Center of Photography, New York, USA Der nackte Mann, Lentos Kunstmuuseum, Linz, Österreich; Ludwig Museum, Budapest, Hungary Body Image: American Art and the Human Form, Birmingham Museum of Art, Birmingham, USA Self-Portrait, Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Humlebaek, Denmark 2008 2012 North Diana und Aktaion, Museum Kunst Palast, Düsseldorf, Germany Sala Pelaires, C/Pelaires, 5, E07001 Palma de Mallorca, Spain Fotografien aus der Sammlung agnès b., C/O Berlin, Germany Körper als Protest, Albertina, Vienna, Austria FEMALE TROUBLE, Pinakothek der Moderne, Munich, Germany Regarding Warhol: Sixty Artists, Fifty Years, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA Street & Studio, Tate Modern, London, England Poule!, Jumex Collection, Mexico City, Mexico Punk. No One is Innocent, Kunsthalle Wien, Vienna, Austria Photography on Photography: Reflections on the Medium since 1960, Metropolitan Museum, New York, USA 2011 Second Thoughts, CCS Bard Hessel Museum, Annandale-on-Hudson, USA CIRCA 1986, Hudson Valley Center for Contemporary Art, Peekskill, USA Nina in Position, Artists Space, New York, USA Clap, Hessel Museum of Art, Bard College, Annadale-on-Hudson, USA Political Corect, Blondeau Fine Art Services, Genève, Switzerland Off the Wall/Fora da Parede, Fundação de Serralves, Porto, Portugal Autour de l’extrême, Maison Européenne de la Photographie, Paris, France 2007 Eros, Fondation Beyeler, Basel, Switzerland 2010 Das achte Feld / The eight square, Museum Ludwig Köln, Cologne, Germany Man Ray – Mapplethorpe, Fondazione Marconi, Milan, Italy The body exposed, ArteF, Zurich, Switzerland Chelsea Hotel: Ghosts of Bohemia, DOX Centre for Contemporary Art, Prague, Czech Republic The heartbeat of fashion, Deichtorhallen Hamburg, Germany Nude Visions – 150 Jahre Körperbilder in der Fotografie, Museum der bildenden Künste Leipzig, Germany Revelation, Kulturhuset Stockholm, Sweden Incognito: The Hidden Self-Portrait, Yancey Richardson Gallery, New York, USA Galerie tazl, Graz, Austria Off the Wall. Part 1: Thirty Performative Actions, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, USA Wrestle, Hessel Museum of Art / CCS Bard, Annandale-on-Hudson, USA Haunted: Contemporary Photography/Video/Performance, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, USA Into Me / Out of Me, KW – Kunstwerke Berlin, Germany, MACRO – Museo d´Arte Contemporanea Roma, Italy Kontroversen. Justiz, Ethik und Fotografie, KunstHaus Wien, Vienna, Austria Family Pictures, Guggenheim Museum New York, USA 58,59
Eros in der Kunst der Moderne, BA-CA Kunstforum, Wien, Austria The Body in question, Aperture Foundation, New York, USA Rockers Island. Olbricht Collection, Museum Folkwang, Essen, Germany The Power of Theatrical Madness, Fotografie Forum Frankfurt, Frankfurt a.M., Germany MODE:BILDER Sammlung F.C. Gundlach, NRW-Forum, Dusseldorf, Germany Modern Botanical, ICAC Weston Gallery, Carmel, USA Exhibitionism, CCS Bard Hessel Museum, Annandale-on-Hudson, USA National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, Australia exitus. tod alltäglich, Künstlerhaus Wien, Austria Erotic Desire, Perspektief, Rotterdam, Netherlands Seduced – Art and Sex from Antiquity to Now, Barbican Centre, London, England La Revanche de L’Image, Galerie Pierre Huber, Geneva, Switzerland Framed, Stephen Wirtz Gallery, San Francisco, USA 2006 Cruciformed: Images of the Cross since 1980, Cleveland Center for Contemporary Art, Cleveland, travelled to Whitney Biennial, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, USA the Museum of Contemporary Art at Wright State University, Dayton, USA Good Vibrations. Visual arts and rock music, Palazzo delle Papesse – Centro Arte Contemporanea, Siena, Italy Photography From 1980 to 1990, Ginny Williams Gallery, Denver, USA Speaking with Hands. Photographs from The Buhl Collection, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum Bilbao, Spain; Galerie Nikolaus Sonne, Berlin, Germany Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum New York, USA; Museum Folkwang, Essen, Germany Celebrity Portraits, Sean Kelly Gallery, New York, USA 1990 Thank you for the Music, Galerie Sprüth Magers, Simon Lee, London, England The Indomitable Spirit, The International Center of Photography, Midtown, New York, USA; travelled to Jan Fabre, beaumontpublic+königbloc, Luxemburg Lorence Monk Gallery and Pace/ MacGill Gallery, New York; Fraenkel Gallery, San Francisco; Rhona Hoffman Singular, Galleri S.E., Bergen, Norway Gallery, Chicago; Blum Helman Gallery, Santa Monica; The Los Angeles Municipal Art Gallery, Los Angeles, USA La vision impura, Reina Sofía, Madrid, Spain Botanica: The Secret Life of Plants, Lehman College Art Gallery, The City University of New York, USA Baldwin Gallery, Aspen, USA Disturb Me, Massimo Audiello Gallery, New York, USA Die verliehene Zeit, Neues Museum Weserburg, Bremen, Germany The Humanist Icon, The Bayly Art Museum, Charlottesville, USA; travelled to The New York Academy of Art, In Sight, MoCP–Museum of Contemporary Photography, Chicago, USA New York and to the Edwin A. Ulrich Museum of Art, Wichita State University, Wichita, USA Into me / Out of me, P.S.1 MoMA, Long Island, USA G. Ray Hawkins Gallery, Los Angeles, USA Flutter, The Approach, London, England Corpus Christi, Kunsthalle Krems, Austria 1989 Surprise, Surprise, ICA – Institute of Contemporary Arts, London, England Photography Now, Victoria and Albert Museum, London, England Das Portrait in der zeitgenössischen Photographie, Frankfurter Kunstverein, Frankfurt a.M., Germany 2005 150 Years of Photography, National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., USA; travelled to The Art Institute of Thank you for the Music, Galerie Sprüth Magers, Munich, Germany Chicago and LACMA, Los Angeles, USA Hara Museum of Contemporary Art, Tokyo, Japan The Legacy of William Henry Fox Talbot, Burden Gallery, New York, USA Flashback – Eine Revision der Kunst der 80er Jahre, Museum für Gegenwartskunst, Basel, Switzerland Betsy Rosenfield Gallery, Chicago, USA Singular, Galleri SE, Bergen, Norway L’Invention d’un Art, Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris, France Taboo, Greg Kucera Gallery, Seattle, USA 2004 Self and Shadow, Burden Gallery, Aperture Foundation, New York, USA Pictures Pictures, Marc Selwyn Fine Art, Los Angeles, USA Museo De Arte Contemporaneo de Caracas, Caracas, Venezuela Pandemic: Imaging AIDS, The Watson Institute for International Studies, Providence, USA Das Portrait in der zeitgenössischen Photographie, Kulturzentrum Mainz, Germany 2002 Portrait Photography, Mai 36 Galerie, Zurich, Switzerland 1997 Goodbye to Berlin? 100 Jahre Schwulenbewegung, Schwules Museum, Akademie der Künste, Berlin, Germany 1992 Portraits, Klarfeld Perry Gallery, New York, USA The Midtown Flower Show, Midtown Payson Galleries, New York; travelled to The Portland Museum of Art, Maine, USA 1991 Fashion Photography Since 1945, Victoria and Albert Museum, London, England Twentieth Century Collage, Margo Leavin Gallery, Los Angeles, USA; travelled to Centro Cultural Arte Con- temporaneo, Mexico City, and Musee D’Arte Moderne et D’ Arte Contemporain, Nice, France 7 Women, Andrea Rosen Gallery, New York, USA 60,61
Publisher Galerie Thomas Schulte GmbH Charlottenstraße 24 D-10117 Berlin Phone: 0049 (0)30 20 60 89 90 www.galeriethomasschulte.de Photo Credits © 2020 The Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation, the photographers and Galerie Thomas Schulte
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