Rosy fingered Dawn Gagosian Athens
Douglas Gordon, Exhibit D, 2016, Carrara marble. Photograph by Studio lost but found / Katharina Kiebacher

ROSY FINGERED DAWN by Douglass Gordan & Lawrence Weiner

Where: Gagosian Athens
When: On now - 20th May 2017
Why Go: Two artists examine modern art today

Gagosian Athens is pleased to present “Rosy-Fingered Dawn,” a correspondence between Douglas Gordon and Lawrence Weiner. For both artists, the written word is a formal foundation and a conceptual conduit. Exploring processes of human consciousness and perception, Gordon reveals the dual nature of the self, while Weiner exposes the sculptural dimensions of language. “Rosy Fingered Dawn” is a recurring epithet from Homer’s Odyssey, an optimistic proposition for a new beginning.

Gordon’s projections, installations, photographs, text works, and performances investigate the potential of collective memory. Here, seven marble sculptures depict parts of the artist’s hands and forearms in embracing positions. The gestures can be read as either innocent or sinister. Precise details, like veins and creases in the skin, emerge from more amorphous, uncarved areas. The hands are simultaneously in progress and in ruin, their missing fingers and jagged surfaces evoking fragments of ancient sculpture.

Rosy fingered Dawn Gagosian Athens

Douglas Gordon, Exhibit B, 2016 Carrara marble. Photo by Studio lost but found / Katharina Kiebacher

Rosy fingered Dawn Gagosian Athens

Douglas Gordon, Shadow and Ghosts, 2012, Stenciled silver spray paint on white wall. Photo: Studio lost but found / Frederik Pedersen

Weiner’s work intersects the structure of language with the structure of sculpture. His phrases and striking graphics—stenciled, painted, inscribed, or otherwise applied to walls and surfaces—inescapably alter their given context. Here, in overlapping English and Modern Greek, Weiner evokes the predatory attraction of one culture for another, suggesting a fatal erotic encounter. The text is presented in vivid blue and reflective silver, and arranged in sliding sculptural segments that accentuate the innate materiality of language. In Weiner’s words, it “HAS TO DO WITH THE CARESS OF ONE CULTURE TO ANOTHER & AS IT ASSUMES AN UNDERSTANDING OF THAT CULTURE IT DISCARDS ITS MEANING.”

Like the fragments of Ancient Greek art and philosophy that have given rise to entire new histories, Gordon’s and Weiner’s sculptures invite the viewer to construct individual scaffolds of meaning around them.

About Gagosian Galleries

The Gagosian is part of a network of galleries established by Larry Gagosian in Los Angeles in 1980 to cater to modern and contemporary art. Since then it has expanded to 16 exhibition spaces worldwide, including New York, San Francisco, London, Paris, Rome, Athens, Geneva and Hong Kong.

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