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Cindy Shermanexhibitionsselected work biography bibliography articles films | Cindy Sherman Sprüth Magers Berlin february 18 - april 18 2009Overview / Press Release english / deutsch / download press releaseTo create her photographs, Sherman shoots alone in her studio, assuming multiple roles as author, director, make-up artist, hairstylist, wardrobe mistress, and of course, model. The idea and experience of getting dressed up and putting on a show is central to Sherman’s practice, yet Sherman is also careful to closely manage the detail of each performance. Every bulge of flesh, strand of hair, rouged cheek or wrinkled brow is deliberately orchestrated to construct a vividly real yet curiously inscrutable character. The tension between pathos and alienation which Sherman’s figures evoke in the viewer are heightened by the contexts in which they appear, always obviously staged and cleverly apposite. Her creations are photographed in front of a green screen, and then digitally inserted onto backgrounds which are shot and manipulated separately, scenarios which elaborate and complicate the narrative constructed by Sherman’s garb and gaze. Each of the women which feature in Sherman’s new exhibition share an acute consciousness of glamour and social hierarchy, which is both disquietingly flagrant and sardonically relevant to contemporary obsessions with image and status. In one photograph (Untitled #465, 2008), the fiercely proud eyes of a woman installed in her warped and blurred country estate stare out of a face regrettably cracked and peeling with age, ill concealed by make-up, hair-dye or expensive pearls. In another work from the series (Untitled #467, 2008), a woman with a tight sequined skirt, fake gold jewellery and extravagant fake white nails also glares out, perhaps daring the viewer to call her trash, or ruefully acknowledging that this is what she is. It is ultimately impossible, however, to fix any stable narrative in Sherman’s work; different levels of pretence and authenticity operate and interact in her images to complicate any straightforward reading of her characters, or the stories they might tell the viewer. Cindy Sherman’s work has been widely collected and exhibited by major museums throughout the world since 1980. Major solo exhibitions include the Serpentine Gallery, London and the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art in 2003, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art in 1998. Major group shows include Palazzo Grassi, Venice and the Institute of Contemporary Arts, London in 2006, the Guggenheim Museum, New York in 2003 and the Centre Pompidou, Paris and The Museum of Modern Art in 2000. She has been the recipient of a number of major awards over the course of her career, including the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Fellowship in 1983 and the MacArthur fellowship in 1995. Cindy Sherman lives and works in New York. A selection of works from this exhibition will also be shown at Sprüth Magers London, 16 April – 30 May 2009. Sprüth Magers Berlin will also be concurrently hosting Andrea Zittel’s ‘Smockshop Berlin’ and presenting Gerda Scheepers’ ‘Taras Bookies 2007/2009’ at Schellmann Sprüth Magers. For further information, interviews or images, please contact Jan Salewski (js@spruethmagers.com). Private View: Febuary 18th 2009, 6 - 9pm Opening Hours: Tue - Sat, 11am - 6pm |
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