Richard Long “Muddy Heaven”

Sperone Westwater

poster for Richard Long “Muddy Heaven”

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Sperone Westwater presents an exhibition of new work by Richard Long, MUDDY HEAVEN, his sixteenth solo show with the gallery since his first in 1976. Richard Long’s art is grounded in his direct engagement with the landscape, extending the possibilities of sculpture beyond traditional materials and methods by using the earth as both subject and medium. This presentation will span four floors of the gallery featuring a large, site-specific mud work, text works and flint sculpture.

The show takes its title, MUDDY HEAVEN, from the large work in the main gallery that scales the 29-foot high wall from the ground floor to mezzanine level. Applying mud directly by hand, Long will paint six large, parallel bands stacked atop one another, forming the I Ching hexagram for heaven. While the ascending bands of River Avon mud draw the eye upward toward heaven, the watery drips and splashes caused by gravity pull the eye back down to Earth, resulting in a dichotomy that highlights what Long describes as, “the complementary mental and physical aspects of my art – the intellect but also instinctive spontaneous primitive mark making.”

Long’s text pieces demarcate space as much as his physical sculpture. On the first and fourth floors, the artist presents four text works that narrate his outdoor walks and experiences, such as ­­­Dartmoor Walk (2017) from his ­­­­­nine day walk in the United Kingdom’s Dartmoor National Park. Often recording a diary of phenomena along the way, Long’s walks can be both a physical and intellectual pleasure, an ideal means for him to explore relationships between time, distance, geography and measurement. The artist’s text works extend the solitude of his experiences, documenting his physical passage through the landscape. Collectively, they reflect on how the art is rooted in Long’s love of nature and the revolutionary implications of using walking as a medium. Unlike purely conceptual artworks which may exist as ideas or proposals, these text works relate to, in the artist’s words, “real stones, real time, real actions.”

On the third floor, Long will create a sculpture of flint sourced from Norfolk, England, installed in a geometric arrangement. Highlighting the relationship between nature and man, Long uses knapped stone to reveal the irregular black and white patterns hidden beneath the raw flint’s pure white surface. Long explains, “you could say that my work is […] a balance between the patterns of nature and formalism of human, abstract ideas of lines and circles. It is where my human characteristics meet the natural forces and patterns of the world, and that is really the kind of subject of my work.”

Richard Long was born in 1945 in Bristol, England, where he currently lives and works. He studied at the West of England College of Art and St. Martin’s School of Art, London. Since his first solo exhibition in 1968, he has had retrospectives at The Guggenheim, New York (1986); Hayward Gallery, London (1991); Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, Edinburgh (2007); and Tate Britain, London (2009). Solo museum shows include Musée d’art moderne de la ville de Paris (1993), Setagaya Art Museum, Tokyo (1996); Museu Serralves, Portugal (2001); Tate St. Ives, Cornwall (2002); San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (2006); Musée d’art moderne et d’art contemporain de Nice (2008); “ARTIST ROOMS” organized by the National Galleries of Scotland and Tate, which traveled to The Hepworth Wakefield, England, among other venues (2012-20); and Arnolfini, Bristol (2015). Long was awarded the Turner Prize in 1989, the Praemium Imperiale Art Award from Japan in 2009 and the Whitechapel Art Icon Award in 2015. The artist had his first solo show at Sperone Westwater in 1976, where he exhibits regularly (1978, 1980, 1981, 1982, 1984, 1986, 1989, 1991, 1994, 1997, 2000, 2004, 2011, and 2015).

MUDDY HEAVEN is on view concurrently with the artist’s FROM A ROLLING STONE TO NOW exhibition at Lisson Gallery, New York, 504 West 24 Street. An opening reception will be held at both galleries on Thursday, 5 March from 5-7 pm.

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Schedule

from March 06, 2020 to April 18, 2020

Opening Reception on 2020-03-05 from 17:00 to 19:00

Artist(s)

Richard Long

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