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Venue
M WOODS(木木美术馆)
Date
2016.08.06 Sat - 2017.01.07 Sat
Opening Exhibition
07/05/2016
Address
北京市朝阳区酒仙桥路2号798艺术区2号院D-06 D-06,798 Art Zone No.2 Jiuxianqiao RD. Chaoyang District, Beijing, China 100015
Telephone
+86 10 83123450
Opening Hours
Tuesday – Sunday, 10.30am – 6.00pm(星期二至星期日 10:30am - 6:00pm)
Director
Presca Ahn
Email
info@mwoods.org

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Andy Warhol: Contact
[Press Release]

August 6, 2016 – January 7, 2017
M WOODS

Beijing–M WOODS is pleased to announce Andy Warhol: Contact, an exhibition of groundbreaking film, photography, and interactive installations by one of the twentieth century’s most influential artists. Curated by M WOODS Director Presca Ahn, it is the first in a series of major monographic exhibitions planned at the museum over the next three years.

Illuminating areas of Andy Warhol’s practice never before shown in China, Andy Warhol: Contact features a selection of the artist’s Screen Tests, Polaroids, and Wallpaper, as well as his Silver Clouds and the experimental 1963 film Kiss– works which broke the boundaries of contemporary art when they were first made with the new media of Warhol’s time, and still compel viewers today with their extraordinary immediacy.

“In works like these, Warhol diminishes the touch of the artist’s hand by using mechanical means of production and a standardized or repetitive format,” said Ahn. “Despite this, so many of them radiate a very human, personal, at times even poetic quality. This tension is what makes the works so arresting, even now.”

Andy Warhol Self Portrait Polaroid 1 Andy Warhol, Self-Portrait, 1977.
Collection of The Andy Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh

Andy Warhol Self Portrait Polaroid 1
Andy Warhol, Self-Portrait, 1977.
Collection of The Andy Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh

Andy Warhol, Kiss, 1963 (1) Andy Warhol, Kiss, 1963.
16mm film, black and white, silent, 54 minutes at 16 frames per second
© 2016 The Andy Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh, PA, a museum of Carnegie Institute.

Andy Warhol, Kiss, 1963 (1)
Andy Warhol, Kiss, 1963.
16mm film, black and white, silent, 54 minutes at 16 frames per second
© 2016 The Andy Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh, PA, a museum of Carnegie Institute.

Andy Warhol, Kiss, 1963 (2) Andy Warhol, Kiss, 1963.
16mm film, black and white, silent, 54 minutes at 16 frames per second
© 2016 The Andy Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh, PA, a museum of Carnegie Institute.

Andy Warhol, Kiss, 1963 (2)
Andy Warhol, Kiss, 1963.
16mm film, black and white, silent, 54 minutes at 16 frames per second
© 2016 The Andy Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh, PA, a museum of Carnegie Institute.

The exhibition features two bodies of work in which Warhol redefined portraiture: the silent film portraits from the 1960s that he collectively called the Screen Tests, and his portraits of himself and others that he shot on Polaroid film throughout the 1970s and ‘80s. Taking their name from the short films typically made of actors auditioning for film roles, the Screen Tests portray a wide range of artists, celebrities, and Factory regulars such as Marcel Duchamp, Bob Dylan, Lou Reed, and Edie Sedgwick. With the Polaroids, Warhol enacted an obsessive, diaristic documentation of himself and those in his circle, long before the advent of the Internet and social media yielded the phenomenon of the “selfie.”

A highlight of the show is an installation of Warhol’s Silver Clouds, glimmering pillow-like shapes that float gently through the exhibition space. When the work was first shown at New York’s Leo Castelli Gallery in 1966, viewers were free to touch and move among the Clouds, making it one of the earliest examples of an immersive, interactive art installation. Similarly immersive are Warhol’s screenprinted wallpapers, of which two examples will be on view: Cow (1966) and Self-Portrait (1978).

M WOODS will also screen Warhol’s film Kiss (1963), which shows multiple couples, one after the other, engaged in the act of kissing. The film’s serial format and intrusive framing contrast starkly with the intimacy of the acts portrayed. Revealing how Warhol’s interest in the medium of film went beyond the documentation of celebrity and the self, Kiss forces a cold, anthropological contemplation of this classic expression of human passion.

Andy Warhol, Screen Test - Lou Reed Andy Warhol, Screen Test: Lou Reed (Coke) [ST269], 1966.
16mm film, black-and-white, silent, 4.5 minutes at 16 frames per second
© 2016 The Andy Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh, PA, a museum of Carnegie Institute.

Andy Warhol, Screen Test – Lou Reed
Andy Warhol, Screen Test: Lou Reed (Coke) [ST269], 1966.
16mm film, black-and-white, silent, 4.5 minutes at 16 frames per second
© 2016 The Andy Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh, PA, a museum of Carnegie Institute.

Warhol Silver Clouds 2 Andy Warhol, Silver Clouds [Warhol Museum Series], 1994. Collection of The Andy Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh

Warhol Silver Clouds 2
Andy Warhol, Silver Clouds [Warhol Museum Series], 1994. Collection of The Andy Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh

ABOUT M WOODS

M WOODS is a private, not-for-profit art museum founded by collectors Lin Han and Wanwan Lei in Beijing’s 798 Art District. Housed in a former munitions factory dating from the 1950s, M WOODS opened to the public in 2014 with a permanent collection based on the founders’ private collection of international contemporary art. In 2015, collector Michael Xufu Huang joined the museum as a co-founder.

Each year, in addition to showing the permanent collection, M WOODS presents major single-artist and group exhibitions– always one exhibition at a time, reflecting the museum’s uniquely focused commitment to artists. In the same spirit, M WOODS maintains a studio-style artist residency space within the museum building itself, thus actively fostering the creation of new contemporary art alongside its curatorial platform.

Through ongoing educational programming and publications, the museum’s M MEASURES initiative seeks to promote the appreciation of the art of our time within China. In 2015, M WOODS received official not-for-profit status from the government in acknowledgment of its cultural services to the Chinese public.