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Sturtevant Reloaded

Sturtevant Reloaded

Paris Marais

22 November 2014 – 14 January 2015

After having worked with Sturtevant for 25 years, Thaddaeus Ropac presented RELOADED, the first posthumous exhibition at the gallery in the Marais. This exhibition coincided with the comprehensive survey Sturtevant: Double Trouble at the MoMA, New York and later travelled to the MOCA, Los Angeles.

In 1991, our gallery in Paris hosted an exhibition of Sturtevant’s Warhol flowers and in 1994, another exhibition of Sturtevant’s works took place, this time featuring her repetitions of Johns’ number paintings. RELOADED, revisited these exhibitions and brought together – in the same space, on the same walls – a historical body of Sturtevant’s iconic repetitions of Andy Warhol’s Marylin and flowers as well as Jasper Johns’ flags, some of which were shown in these first two exhibitions.

RELOADED was an exhibition of key works by the late Sturtevant, organized in collaboration with Loren Sturtevant, the artist’s daughter. The paintings presented an encompassing and unique environment, highlighted relationships in Sturtevant’s work between her subversive approach to repetition, conceptions of authorship and the abundance of our digital era. Sturtevant always worked from memory, after having seen a work herself, and her aim was not to achieve an exact replica, but instead to force us to look beyond the surface. Her practice investigated aspects of art’s making, circulation and consumption whilst addressing notions of authenticity and originality.

RELOADED recalled Sturtevant’s critical gaze on today’s society that, as she said, is all about remaking, reusing, reassembling and recombining.

This exhibition was an opportunity to gain a new perspective on Sturtevant’s innovations and to (re)discover her unique vision – her interpretation of what constitutes an artwork and her profound insights into the changes in society. As Hans Ulrich Obrist wrote recently, “Her pioneering work is now recognised as having presaged the unattributed information and endlessly repeating imagery that characterise the digital world of today” (The Guardian, 19 May 2014).

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