Anish Kapoor Gallery of Honour Rijksmuseum.
Photo Olivier Middendorp
‘Anish Kapoor & Rembrandt’ at the Rijksmuseum ‘Anish Kapoor & Rembrandt’: three works by the celebrated British artist Anish Kapoor go on show in the Gallery of Honour at the Rijksmuseum. 27 November 2015 – 6 March 2016.]]>
Source: Rijksmuseum
The reliefs, entitled “Internal Object in Three Parts”, mark Kapoor’s return to painting, which he combines with a quest for the raw spaces in both body and psyche. However, Kapoor’s works also tie in with the painting tradition of Rembrandt, Soutine and Bacon, raising themes such as violence, trauma, and social and political unrest. From his earliest days as an artist, he created two-dimensional works in ink, acrylic and oil paint, gouache, pigment and earth on both paper and canvas. These new works recall his mechanised installations such as “My Red Homeland” (2003), “Svayambh” (2009) and “Shooting into the Corner” (2009). Finally, “Internal Object in Three Parts” shows Kapoor reflecting his interest in the Greek legend of the satyr Marsyas. Marsyas challenged Apollo, the god of music, to a musical duel, which Marsyas lost. Apollo then tied Marsyas to a tree and skinned him alive.
Anish Kapoor (b. Bombay 1954; currently residing in London) is one of the most influential sculptors of his generation. He often works with reflective surfaces using different materials. His immense artworks in particular (Levathian, Grand Palais, Paris, 2011) are world renowned. Kapoor draws on myths from ancient times (India, Egypt, Greece, Rome) but also works with 20th century themes. This summer, Anish Kapoor made the news with his largest exhibition to date in the gardens of the castle of Versailles. His work ‘Dirty Corner’ was covered in graffiti within days of going on display.
The Rijksmuseum regularly offers space to contemporary artists including Damien Hirst (2008), Anselm Kiefer (2011), Frank Auerbach (2013), and Daan Roosegaarde (2014). In the permanent collection, works can be found by Subodh Gupta, Ai Weiwei, Edmund de Waal and Richard Wright.
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