Tony Cragg
March 17 - April 17, 2010Press Release
Lisson Gallery is proud to present an exhibition of major new works by Tony Cragg, whose first solo show with the gallery was in 1979. Cragg's position as one of the pre-eminent artists and cultural figures of his generation was acknowledged in his award of the Praemium Imperiale in 2007. In September 2008 he opened Waldfrieden, a major outdoor park and gallery for sculpture in his home town, Wuppertal in Germany. Last year Cragg was appointed Dirdector of the Kunstakademie Dusseldorf, one of Europe's most prestigious art schools. In 2009 he presented a major exhibition of sculpture and drawings in Karlsruhe and Salzburg.
Tony Cragg's abiding interest is in the dynamic potential of matter to assume form. At the Lisson, he will present five large new sculptures, a series of smaller works and a number of related drawings. The selection demonstrates the consistency with which Cragg has pursued his sculptural explorations, particularly since he moved from his early assemblages to casting sculptures in the mid-1980s; it also demonstrates the range and ambition of those explorations. Cragg, an unashamed materialist, is nevertheless a magician of matter, taking an essentially simple image like the human profile or the hollowness of many natural forms and subjecting them to extreme extrapolation. This often takes place around an active axial structure: Cragg has said that in these works 'there is no longer a straight axis, the axis bends and re-orients itself compressing the volumes around it. Obviously, the forms associated with these kinds of variable axis infer an energetic dynamic, the kind of constant material condition found in the whirlings of tornadoes...' (quoted in 'Tony Cragg, Signs of Life,' 2003). In his new exhibition, Tony Cragg works with wood, fibreglass, cast and constructed steel, in each case taking his interest in material beyond the conventional constraints and processes of fabrication or imagination. His drawings add another dimension to the work, often zooming in to microscopic detail or out to macrocosmic form.
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Exhibition Images

Hedge, 2008 Steel 150 x 160 x 70 cm

Luke, 2008 Bronze 360 x 192 x 180 cm

WT (cube), 2008 Wood 123 x 120 x 114 cm

Hamlet, 2009 Wood 386 x 130 x 100 cm

Hamlet, 2009 (detail) Wood 386 x 130 x 100 cm

WT (double zig), 2009 Bronze 140 x 130 x 72 cm

WT (Inverted Columns stainless), 2009 Stainless Steel 110 x 37 x 49 cm

WT (white stone 240), 2010 (detail) Stone 240 x (ca120 x 120) cm

WT (white stone 240), 2010 Stone 240 x(ca120 x 120) cm

Elbow, 2010 Wood 250 x 102 x 429 cm

Elbow, 2010 (different view) Wood 250 x 102 x 429 cm

Elbow, 2010 (different view) Wood 250 x 102 x 429 cm

Hedge, 2010 Fiberglass 200 x 380 x 150 cm

Tony Cragg, Installation View, 2010

Tony Cragg, Installation View, 2010

Tony Cragg, Installation View, 2010

Tony Cragg, Installation View, 2010

Tony Cragg, Installation View, 2010

Tony Cragg, Installation View, 2010

Tony Cragg, Installation View, 2010

Companions, 2008 Fiberglass 278 x 205 x 294 cm

Companions, 2008 (detail) Fiberglass 278 x 205 x 294 cm