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== External links ==
== External links ==
{{Commons category|Franz_West|Franz West}}
{{Commons category|Franz_West|Franz West}}
*[http://www.contemporaryartdaily.com/?s=Franz+West/ Documentation of recent Franz West exhibitions]
* [http://www.baeditions.com/franz-west-artwork.htm Franz West at Brooke Alexander Gallery]
* [http://www.baeditions.com/franz-west-artwork.htm Franz West at Brooke Alexander Gallery]
* [http://www.gagosian.com/artists/franz-west/ Franz West at Gagosian Gallery]
* [http://www.gagosian.com/artists/franz-west/ Franz West at Gagosian Gallery]

Revision as of 21:50, 11 October 2010

Franz West
File:Franz West sculpture.jpg
Lemur Head (1994); wood, paint, bed, plaster, and mixed media; in the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden
NationalityAustrian
EducationAcademy of Fine Arts Vienna
Known forSculpture, Painting, Drawing
Notable workThe Ego and the Id
MovementContemporary art
AwardsOtto Mauer-Preis (1986), Skulpturenpreis der Generali Foundation (1993), Wolfgang-Hahn-Preis, Museum Ludwig (1998)
Flause (1998); Aluminium

Franz West (German: Franz West) (born February 16, 1947 in Vienna) is an Austrian artist who currently resides in Vienna. West studied at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna with Bruno Gironcoli. He is married to the Georgian artist Tamuna Sirbiladze who too is based in Vienna.

Work

His radical art, which started as a reaction to the Viennese Actionism movement has been exhibited in museums and galleries for more than three decades.[1] Over the last 20 years he had a regular presence in big expositions like Documenta and the Venice Biennale.[2]

The Baltimore Museum of Art with help from former Senior Curator of Contemporary Art, Darsie Alexander, hosted the very first "comprehensive survey" to ever been done in the U.S. of Franz West's artwork which contained his latest artwork designed specifically for the Baltimore Museum of Art, The Igo and the Id.[3] – which "consists of two configurations of rumpled, ribbon-like loops rising some 20 feet high. One is bright pink, the other neatly painted in blocks of green, yellow, blue and orange. Both have round stools projecting from the lower ends of the loops."[2]

West's artwork is made out of plaster, papier-mâché, wire, polyester, aluminium and other, ordinary materials. He started to produce paintings, but then turned to collages, sculptures, portable sculptures called "Adaptives" or "Fitting Pieces", environments and furniture – "welded metal chairs and divans, some minimally padded and upholstered in raw linen."[2]

It doesn't matter what the art looks like but how it's used. Franz West [4]

The Fitting Pieces

Around 1980 West startet to create "plaster objects, usually a few feet long, meant to be placed over the face, worn around the waist or held in the crook of the neck. Although they suggest masks and props for the commedia dell'arte, their shapes are usually ambiguous: no matter how figurative and sexual Mr. West's objects may be, they remain abstract. The pieces can be worn on the street or carried like a partner in an enraptured solipsistic dance. They leave the wearer looking both protected and trapped."[5]

Solo Exhibitions (Selection)

Awards

Reviews

  • Schjeldahl, Peter (3 November 2008). "The Art World: Just for Fun". The New Yorker. 38 (35): 114–115. Retrieved 17 April 2009.

References

  1. ^ http://www.gagosian.com/artists/franz-west/
  2. ^ a b c Johnson, Ken, "Sculpture That Asks You to Set a Spell", New York Times.com / Art & Design / Art Review, 2008-12-19
  3. ^ http://www.artbma.org/exhibitions/past.html
  4. ^ Smith, Roberta, "Designers for a Day: Sculptors Take a Turn", New York Times.com / Art & Design / Art Review, 2004-09-10
  5. ^ Brenson, Michael, "Franz West, With Whom Neatness Doesn't Count", New York Times.com / Art & Design / Art Review, 1989-06-16

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