Digital Editions
Newsletters
Subscribe
Digital Editions
Newsletters
Art market
Museums & heritage
Exhibitions
Books
Podcasts
Columns
Technology
Adventures with Van Gogh
Art market
Museums & heritage
Exhibitions
Books
Podcasts
Columns
Technology
Adventures with Van Gogh
Exhibitions
preview

The slow and meticulous work of Vija Celmins zooms into view at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art

Artist’s retrospective encourages viewers to take their time when looking in the modern age

Nancy Kenney
14 December 2018
Share
Vija Celmins's Suspended Plane (1966) © Vija Celmins and courtesy Matthew Marks Gallery

Vija Celmins's Suspended Plane (1966) © Vija Celmins and courtesy Matthew Marks Gallery

Vija Celmins is perhaps best known for her obsessive, minutely detailed images of ocean waves and the star-filled night sky, and indeed throughout her career she has repeatedly returned to those subjects. Yet, such pieces are notoriously hard to come by: the artist works at an exacting pace, and museums and private collectors hoping to acquire her paintings or drawings have had to bide their time.

So it seems fitting that the retrospective opening this month at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art has also been in long gestation—ten years, according to Gary Garrels, senior curator of painting and sculpture.

The show, including nearly 150 works, encompasses roughly half of what Celmins has produced over the last five and a half decades. It underlines how the Latvian-born artist, 80, resists easy categorisation, although some see links to Conceptualism and Minimalism. Once she came into her own, Garrels notes, Celmins opted for an overwhelming concentration on the object being rendered. Whether it is the ocean, a desert, a spider’s web or a blackboard slate, “there is this sense of discipline and acute consciousness of just being in the present, of looking with an intensity that’s not typical”, he says. This is particularly true today as “we’re bombarded with hundreds of images constantly and we tend to scan”.

Vija Celmins's Untitled (Ocean) (1977) © Vija Celmins; Photo: Don Ross, courtesy the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art

After finishing art college in Indiana in the early 1960s, Celmins decided against migrating to the East Coast and instead enrolled at the University of California, Los Angeles. There she rejected the gestural painting of the Abstract Expressionists and instead began making painstaking paintings of things in her studio: an envelope, a lamp, a hot plate, a space heater. She then moved on to mostly monochromatic paintings and drawings of subjects photographed for newspapers and magazines, such as fighter planes.

The show also focuses on many of the grey yet luminous ocean drawings Celmins began in the late 1960s, along with images of deserts and lunar surfaces. Along the way she gained broad recognition among her mostly male peers on the California art scene—a rarity for women at the time. But still restless for what New York had to offer, Celmins decamped for the city in 1981 and has lived there since.

Two galleries in the show will be devoted to the artist’s paintings and drawings of the night sky dating from the late 1980s to 2001. Other highlights include her Blackboard Tableau #1 (2007-10) and To Fix the Image in Memory I-XI (1977-82), an assemblage of found stones along with painted bronze casts of them, which inspired the subtitle of the show.

Vija Celmins's To Fix the Image in Memory I–XI (1977–82) © Vija Celmins and courtesy Matthew Marks Gallery

Garrels hopes visitors will “become aware of [their] own process of observation” by zeroing in on each work. “To let it saturate our consciousness is such a refreshing experience,” he adds.

Support for the exhibition was provided by the Mimi and Peter Haas Fund, among others. The show, co-curated with Ian Alteveer from the Metropolitan Museum of Art, will travel to the Art Gallery of Ontario and the Met Breuer next year.

• Vija Celmins: To Fix the Image in Memory, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco, 15 December-31 March 2019

ExhibitionsContemporary artVija CelminsSan Francisco Museum of Modern ArtSan Francisco
Share
Subscribe to The Art Newspaper’s digital newsletter for your daily digest of essential news, views and analysis from the international art world delivered directly to your inbox.
Newsletter sign-up
Information
About
Contact
Cookie policy
Data protection
Privacy policy
Frequently Asked Questions
Subscription T&Cs
Terms and conditions
Advertise
Sister Papers
Sponsorship policy
Follow us
Instagram
Bluesky
LinkedIn
Facebook
TikTok
YouTube
© The Art Newspaper

Related content

Exhibitionsreview
22 November 2022

The rediscovery of Abstract Expressionist Bernice Bing

The Chinese American artist, who died at age 62 in relative obscurity, is the subject of an illuminating exhibition at the Asian Art Museum in San Francisco

Scarlet Cheng
Three to seereview
26 September 2019

Three exhibitions to see in New York this weekend

From the Met Breuer’s Vija Celmins retrospective to Kehinde Wiley’s first public sculpture

Gabriella Angeleti and Nancy Kenney