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R.B. Kitaj (1932–2007)
Obsessions

Press Information

Press Release, Thu 23 Aug 2012

The opening of the first posthumous retrospective on the oeuvre of the American artist R.B. Kitaj at the Jewish Museum Berlin (21 September 2012 to 27 January 2013) is less than a month ahead. The last comprehensive exhibition was shown 14 years ago when the artist was still alive - in four cities between Oslo and Madrid. The upcoming exhibition of the artist, who died in 2007, includes loans from leading museums and private collections throughout the world, including works form the MoMA in New York, the Tate Gallery in London and the Thyssen-Bornemisza collection in Madrid. One hundred thirty paintings, prints and drawings from all periods of his oeuvre will be shown.

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The large retrospective at the Jewish Museum Berlin is the first to include material from the extensive private archive of the artist - R.B.Kitaj´s “Yellow Studio” in Los Angeles. The artist´s bequest at the University of California Los Angeles (UCLA) holds important clues for the decryption of the multi-layered pictures, which to this day are considered both provocative and mysterious.

For the first time, the exhibition presents Kitaj´s sources of visual and intellectual inspiration and also includes the material he used for his work: books, texts, photos, post cards, and sketches drawn on napkins or newspaper clippings, which Kitaj collected and spread out in his studio. Based on the model of Aby Warburg´s “Picture Atlas”, to which Kitaj referred again and again over the course of his work, they will be shown on 20 round tables. Each table is dedicated to one specific work of Kitaj´s, tracing its evolution back to the sources that inspired him and to the elements and models he used to compose it. Thus visitors are able to gain insight into his techniques of collage and distortion.

Kitaj´s oeuvre is divided into 13 topics after which the individual rooms are named. They range from his relationship with his friends and intellectual role models to questions of Jewish identity and also include the obsessive and erotomaniacal exploration of women in his art.

Throughout his lifetime, Kitaj portrayed close friends, role models and soul mates. Two rooms alone deal with this large “Circle of Friends”. This circle included the painter David Hockney, the author Philip Roth and the rabbi Albert Friedlander as well as intellectual role models such as Franz Kafka, Hannah Arendt, Sigmund Freud and also Aby Warburg.

Kitaj created complex pictures on current political, moral and cultural topics. He explored the Vietnam War, the assassination of President Kennedy and the excesses of violence and corruption in the USA and dealt with these topics in his paintings, all of which are composed with a variety of motifs. These large-format works created in surrealist style are shown in the room “Analyst of His Time”.

Since the middle of the 1970s R.B. Kitaj positioned himself explicitly as a Jewish artist. Two rooms in the exhibition, “The Secret and the Public Jew” and “Obsessions”, are dedicated to Kitaj´s analysis of his Jewish identity: for Kitaj “the Jewish question” was at the core of an obsessive, life-long search for his position as a Jewish artist. First and foremost he found his role-models among the writers and intellectuals of the 1920s. “Diaspora” and the “Diasporic” became key words in this search, two expressions that enabled him to harmonize his origin, situation in life and artistic impression with his Jewishness. The two rooms “Catalonia and Diaspora” and “The Library as a Diasporic Home” visualize his concept of the Diaspora as “inner exile”.

As an artist, R.B. Kitaj experienced his biggest triumphs in Europe but also his deepest disappointment. Two exhibition rooms, “Tate War” and “Retreat”, are dedicated to this phase of his life. When the great retrospective of his oeuvre at the Tate Gallery in 1994 triggered a flood of negative reviews, Kitaj referred to it as the “Tate War”, which for him was further confirmation of his position as an outsider and ultimately caused him to return to the USA.

The exhibition R.B. Kitaj (1932–2007) – Obsessions” is an exhibition of the Jewish Museum Berlin in cooperation with the Kulturprojekte Berlin GmbH. Responsible for the design of the exhibition are Holzer Kobler Architekturen (Zurich/Berlin).

Separate invitations to the Press Conference on 20 September at 11 am, including a preview of the exhibition, will go out to you shortly.

On the occasion of R.B. Kitaj´s (1932-2007) 80th birthday this year, the Jewish Museum Berlin will hold a symposium on 25/26 October with speakers from Germany, Great Britain and the US and in cooperation with the Akademie der Künste and Humboldt Universität Berlin. From 1993 to 2007 Kitaj was a member of the Akademie der Künste, Section Visual Arts.

The comprehensive catalog will be available in German and in English. 256 pages, 200 pictures in color, comparative pictures and five fold-out panels, museum edition 34 €, press copy 12 €, Kerber Verlag Bielefeld/Berlin 2012, ISBN (Ger.): 978-3-86678-697-4, ISBN (Engl.): 978-3-86678-697-5.

The audioguide offers texts written by R.B. Kitaj on selected works.

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