“No Problem: Cologne/New York 1984-1989” Exhibition

David Zwirner 19th Street

poster for “No Problem: Cologne/New York 1984-1989” Exhibition

This event has ended.

The contemporary art that was created and presented in New York and Cologne during the 1980s shaped a certain creative discourse between artists, curators, and gallerists on both sides of the Atlantic. This exhibition proposes an examination of this dialogue by focusing on the international artists who showed in both New York and Cologne between 1984 and 1989 and the key gallery and museum exhibitions of the period that took place in both cities.

For the better part of the 1980s until the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989, Cologne was arguably the European center of the contemporary art world. While a number of established Cologne-based gallerists, including Karsten Greve, Paul Maenz, Rolf Ricke, Michael Werner, and Rudolf Zwirner, had already begun shaping the European reception of American art in the previous decade, the 1980s marked a period during which art being produced in and around Cologne gained international attention. A burgeoning gallery scene supported the emerging work of artists based in the region, with gallerists such as Gisela Capitain, Rafael Jablonka, Max Hetzler, and Monika Sprüth showing artists such as Dahn, Kippenberger, Oehlen, Trockel, and others. These German artists were exhibited along with the latest contemporary art from the US by artists like Gober, Koons, Prince, Sherman, and Wool. Conversely, the work of German artists was presented in New York, with breakout exhibitions at galleries such as Barbara Gladstone, Metro Pictures, Luhring Augustine, and other significant venues.

Important museum exhibitions that explored work being produced and exhibited on both sides of the Atlantic also set the tone for this ongoing dialogue, among them Europa/Amerika (Museum Ludwig, Cologne, 1986); A Distanced View: One Aspect of Recent Art from Belgium, France, Germany, and Holland (New Museum, New York, 1986); and The BiNational: American Art of the late 80s, German Art of the late 80s (Museum of Fine Arts/Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston and the Städtische Kunsthalle/Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen, Düsseldorf, 1988).

The exhibition at David Zwirner will bring into focus what kind of influences, affinities, and dialogues may have been inspired at this distinct nexus, and the works on view are drawn from the Cologne and New York exhibitions in which the artists took part between 1984 and 1989.

On the occasion of the exhibition, the gallery will publish an extensive catalogue that will include new scholarship by Diedrich Diederichsen and Bob Nickas, in addition to interviews with curators, artists, and gallerists and documentary photographs from the period.


[image: Martin Kippenberger, The person who can’t dance says the band can’t play, 1984. Oil on canvas. 64’x53 1/2’. © Estate Martin Kippenberger, Galerie Gisela Capitain, Cologne.]

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