17. de maig 2024
Photo: John Hill/World-Architects
Jenny Holzer: Light Line is on display at the Guggenheim Museum in New York City from May 17 until September 29, 2024. The major exhibition features a selection of artworks created by the artist from the 1970s to the present and, at its center, a new manifestation of Installation for the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, the site-specific electronic sign Holzer installed decades ago.
Jenny Holzer: Light Line is not the first time the New York artist has commandeered the atrium of Frank Lloyd Wright's Guggenheim Museum for her text-based art. The exhibition comes 35 years after a monographic show was installed in the museum, its main piece wrapping half of the spiraling ramps with an LED sign — at 535 feet (163 m), it was the longest in the world at the time — displaying, like an arty news ticker, enigmatic and socially charged statements. It was as if Times Square was supplanted to the Guggenheim. The New York Times art critic wrote upon its opening in December 1989, “The museum has never looked, nor felt, quite like this.”
Jenny Holzer, Untitled (Selections from Truisms, Inflammatory Essays, The Living Series, The Survival Series, Under a Rock, Laments, and Child Text), 1989. Extended helical tricolor L.E.D. electronic-display signboard, site-specific dimensions. Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, Partial gift of the artist, 1989; Gift, Jay Chiat, 1995; and purchased with funds contributed by the International Director's Council and Executive Members, 89.3626. © 2023 Jenny Holzer. Photo: David Heald © Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation, New York
The installation of the earlier Jenny Holzer exhibition coincided with the Guggenheim's 30th anniversary. Right after the exhibition wrapped, in February 1990, the museum closed for two years for the construction of the controversial annex designed by Charles Gwathmey. The timing was also notable because Holzer followed the Guggenheim show by filling the US Pavilion at the 1990 Venice Art Biennale with her LED language art (she was the first woman to represent the US in Venice), winning the Golden Lion for best national representation. The one-two punch of the Guggenheim and Biennale brought her international acclaim and helped make her a household name.
Decades later, Holzer's LED ticker is considered arguably the greatest site-specific installation in the Guggenheim's rotunda, but, given that it was on display for just two months, it was seen by very few people. With Jenny Holzer: Light Line, which features a reimagining of the 1989 artwork, many more people will have a chance to see an even larger installation of the LED sign, alongside other old and recent works by the artist. World-Architects got a peek of the exhibition ahead of today's opening and offers the following visual tour accompanied by captions with our impressions.