ROBERT
MAPPLETHORPE and the CLASSICAL TRADITION
Robert Mapplethorpe
Hardbound
, 10" x 11", 208 pages
168 four-color illustrations
2004, Guggenheim Museum
Essays by Arkady Ippolitov, Germano Celant,
and Jennifer Blessing
From the Publisher:
Robert Mapplethorpe never concealed his interest in and passion
for the human figure in all its sensuous manifestations. His celebrated
black-and-white photographs from the later part of the 20th century
reveled in the athletic body, the nude body, the exquisite body.
This groundbreaking exhibition and its accompanying catalogue
explore the relationship between the photography of Robert Mapplethorpe
and Classical art, in particular through Mannerist engravings
and sculpture. The pairing of works is among the first collaborations
between the Guggenheim Museum and the State Hermitage Museum.
Robert Mapplethorpe and the Classical Tradition exemplifies
the artist's rapport with the elongated and elaborate forms of
Mannerist art, namely the study of the human body, highlighting
the underlying classicism evident in the clarity and potency of
all Mapplethorpe’s subjects as well as their explosive energy.
The classical ideal was not only a poetic inspiration but also
an ethical model and, in his creative quest, Mapplethorpe described
photography as "the perfect way to make a sculpture."
The potency of love and Eros, which electrifies many of the Mannerist
works shown here, is articulated again in the work of Mapplethorpe.
The vital anatomical forms of his portraits of models such as
bodybuilder Lisa Lyons and the statuesque Derrick Cross find their
roots in Antiquity, and here they find their mirror in the likes
of Jan Harmensz Muller’s Sabine woman and Jacob Matham’s
Apollo. The Hermitage’s superb collection of Italian painting
and sculpture amply illustrates the course of Italian art from
the Middle Ages to the 18th century and includes an impressive
collection of Mannerist works. Approximately 50 Mannerist works
from the Hermitage collection are paired with the same number
of works by Mapplethorpe from the Guggenheim’s collection,
are several Italian, French and Flemish bronze sculptures from
the late 16th and early 17th centuries.
Essays by the curators are included:
Addressing the return to Classicism at the end of the 16th, 19th,
and 20th centuries, Arkady Ippolitov discusses the obsession that
defines both the work of Mapplethorpe and the Mannerists. Germano
Celant's text further explores the influence this 16th-century
style had on Mapplethorpe’s artistic practice and sensibility,
illuminating the artist’s interest in the study of pure
form as well as allegorical imagery. Articulated in both word
and image, the catalogue also traces Mapplethorpe’s complex
relationship to the history of art more broadly, ranging from
Neoclassicism to Surrealism, with comparisons to the work of Jacques-Louis
David, Antonio Canova, Auguste Rodin, Man Ray, and more. A third
essay by Guggenheim Curator Jennifer Blessing traces allegorical
representations in 19th- and 20th-century photography, with references
to Mapplethorpe’s oeuvre.
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