“Peter Campus, circa 1987” Exhibition

Cristin Tierney Gallery

poster for “Peter Campus, circa 1987” Exhibition

This event has ended.

Cristin Tierney Gallery is pleased to announce a black box exhibition of historic photo projections by Peter Campus, opening Thursday, January
19th and on view through Saturday, March 4th, 2017. The exhibition, entitled peter campus, circa 1987.

Four monumental black and white images of stones are projected onto gallery walls in the exhibition. Originally gathered nearly thirty years ago
from rocky beaches around Montauk Point, the stones were collected by the artist in his studio and photographed on spare black backgrounds. Shown floating free of context and projected on a large scale, the images become ambiguous signifiers, receptive to a number of associative meanings.

Suggestive titles—schism, half-life, and affect—also underscore the works’
open-endedness. Describing this impulse to project one’s own ideas onto the
stones, Campus stated: “When I’m in nature, what I’m trying to do is have
some resonance between me and what I’m looking at. I’m not trying to find a
great example of a certain kind of stone, but something that is reflecting the
way I feel that particular day. I try to be as blank as I can to allow my own
projection to meet what’s going on in nature.”[1]

The works in peter campus, circa 1987 form a significant departure from the
artist’s single-channel works and video installations of the 1970s. Whereas
Campus’ earlier work often featured himself or friends or performers as the
subjects, in the 1980s he began to turn his camera outward, instead focusing
on objects from the external world. Between these two bodies of work came a
break of a few years, during which an exhausted Campus withdrew from the
art world. When he returned to his practice in the ‘80s, he brought with him
the conviction that harmony with nature is essential to our identity. Closely
linked to a previous group of video and photo projections of human heads,
the stone works can be interpreted as a product of the artist’s growing interest
in the natural landscape.

Although they were produced as part of a larger group of projections, the
works in peter campus, circa 1987 have never been publicly viewed before.
Other examples from the series were exhibited mainly in Europe, including a
solo exhibition at the Museum Abteiberg in Mönchengladbach, Germany in
1990, as well as the group exhibition être nature at the Fondation Cartier pour
l’art contemporain in 1998 in Paris. The present exhibition marks an
introduction of these key historic works to the United States, thirty years after
they were originally conceived.

peter campus, circa 1987 coincides with a major survey of the artist’s work at
the Galerie Nationale du Jeu de Paume in Paris, opening February 14th,
2017. peter campus: video ergo sum retraces Campus’ career, from the
experimental video and installation art of the 1970s to his recent video works.
Curated by Anne-Marie Duguet, video ergo sum is the artist’s first solo
exhibition in France, and it features a new four-channel video commissioned
by the museum entitled convergence d’images vers le port.

Peter Campus is widely considered a seminal figure in the history of video
and new media art. One of the very first to pick up a video camera and
create art, Campus’ works are part of numerous collections including The
Museum of Modern Art, New York; Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York; Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía, Madrid; Hamburger Bahnhof - Museum für Gegenwart,
Berlin; Tate Modern, London; Fondation Louis Vuitton, Paris; Centre Georges
Pompidou, Paris; Centro Cultural de Arte Contemporáneo, Mexico City; San
Francisco Museum of American Art, San Francisco; Philadelphia Museum of
Art, Philadelphia; Walker Art Center, Minneapolis; Kunsthalle Bremen,
Bremen; Fondation Cartier; Fondation Berne; and the Kramlich Collection.

Media

Schedule

from January 19, 2017 to March 04, 2017

Opening Reception on 2017-01-19 from 18:00 to 20:00

Artist(s)

Peter Campus

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