Exhibition
Lutz Bacher: AYE!
5 Oct 2023 – 17 Dec 2023
Regular hours
- Monday
- Closed
- Tuesday
- Closed
- Wednesday
- 11:00 – 18:00
- Thursday
- 11:00 – 18:00
- Friday
- 11:00 – 18:00
- Saturday
- 11:00 – 18:00
- Sunday
- 11:00 – 18:00
Free admission
Address
- 56 Artillery Lane
- London
- E1 7LS
- United Kingdom
Travel Information
- Liverpool Street
This is the first posthumous institutional exhibition of the unsettling, uncategorisable work of female American artist Lutz Bacher (1943–2019).
About
Bacher’s work oscillates between the conceptual and the visceral. Much of it involves appropriation, using material from American popular culture and flotsam from the information age (pulp fiction, self-help manuals, trade magazines, scientific publications, pornography, bureaucracy, discarded photographs), in work that can be intimate, violent or funny. Bacher often played with her own visibility, making use of personal conversations, relationships and diaristic recordings while working under an assumed name.
This exhibition, initiated with Bacher by curator Anthony Huberman before the artist’s death, explores her use of music and sound. It includes films and installations featuring the voices of Leonard Cohen, Roberta Flack and James Earle Jones, and the funeral of Princess Diana, as well as a pit of sand, giant sound baffles and a machine that plays the keys of an electric organ. Often in Bacher’s film and sound work, moments are suspended, raising tension to a point between agony and bathos.
Lutz Bacher lived most of her life in the San Francisco Bay Area. Although she began making work in the 1970s, she attracted a particular and passionate following through shows in New York during the early 1990s. Later, she made a number of solo institutional exhibitions including at MoMA PS1, New York (2009), the Institute of Contemporary Arts, London (2013) and Secession, Vienna (2016). Raven Row would like to thank the Estate of Lutz Bacher and Galerie Buchholz for their collaboration in the realisation of this exhibition. Lutz Bacher: AYE! is curated by Anthony Huberman.