Cady Noland (born 1956) is an American postmodern conceptual sculptor and an internationally exhibited installation artist whose work deals with the failed promise of the American Dream and the divide between fame and anonymity, among other themes.[1][2] Her work has been exhibited in museums and expositions including the Whitney Biennial in 1991 and Documenta 9 in Kassel, Germany.[3] Noland is known for her reticence to be publicly identified, having only ever allowed one photograph of herself to be publicly released, and for her numerous disputes and lawsuits with museums, galleries, and collectors over their handling of her work.[4] She attended Sarah Lawrence College and is the daughter of the Color Field painter Kenneth Noland.
Oozewald (1989) This Piece Has No Title Yet (1989) The Big Slide (1989) Tower of Terror (1993-1994)
Style and themes
Noland's work often explores what she calls "The American Nightmare," or aspects of American culture she considers toxic, such as social climbing, glamour, celebrity, violence, and death. She describes these social constructs as a "game." Noland's work has dealt with themes of restrictions, both physical and mental, often using metal in her work to evoke senses of joining or separating.[5]
Noland's central theme in her work retains fear, both personal and cultural. Crashed Car was brought upon by the fact that she was in a car wreck at a very young age. In Plane Crash she emphasizes her fear of flying. The Family and the SLA that kidnapped Hearst is based on her fear of cults.[4] Her newest work has been said to be less aggressive and more friendly to viewers, and more stable and grounded.[6]
Noland's work also studies the American social landscape and shows America's social identity to be in fragments. On top of that, she makes sculptures that are prompted by the theme of humiliation that in part lives in the American consciousness. It is all in relation to the institution, containment and mobility, and to the American way of life.[7]
Noland's arrangement of objects have casualness that call into question the status of the art object and its artistic position, and her works are often composed of assembled found objects. Like other fellow artists, such as Mike Scott and Laurie Parsons, Cady Noland's paintings resist interpretation.[8] Appropriated by Noland, the role of the press photograph expanded in a post-war country that was understanding and exporting itself through images. She is known for reframing the photo that she appropriates through the materiality of the image itself. It is then transferred by silkscreen from source to surface. According to Noland, to reproduce the image is to insert it into a category of knowledge and understanding. One that is transformed by way of a continuous return.[9]
This Piece Has No Title Yet (1989) at the Rubell Museum in 2021
Objectification Process (1989) features a rolled-up flag placed on an orthopedic walker. Noland's incorporation of walkers, canes, police barricades, and fences work to convey themes of immobility, containment, confinement, and violence.[10]
This Piece Has No Title Yet (1989), one of Noland's most well-known works, is a room-sized installation composed of over 1000 six-packs of Budweiser beer stacked behind metal scaffolding. Curator and dealer Jeffrey Deitch called the work "her masterpiece, her greatest work."[11]
In her work, Not Yet Titled (Bald Manson Girls Sit-In Demonstration) (1993–1994), Noland changes both the image and the text. It is a wire photo capturing four of the young women from the Manson family kneeling on a sidewalk.[9]
Relationship with art market
Noland set the record for the highest price ever paid for an artwork by a living woman ($6.6million), for her 1989 work Oozewald sold at Sotheby's.[12] In the fall of 2012 the same auction house, Sotheby's, removed her aluminum print Cowboys Milking (1990) from a contemporary sale after the artist "disavowed" the work.[13] Both Noland and the auction house were later sued by the piece's owner, gallerist Marc Jancou, for twenty six million dollars (with twenty million having been sought from Noland and six from Sotheby's).[14] In November 2012 a judge dismissed Jancou's lawsuit.[15]
Noland's 1989 red silkscreen on aluminum of Lee Harvey Oswald, titled Bluewald, sold for $9.8million at Christie's in May 2015, setting a new auction record for the artist.[16]
In June 2015, the Ohio collector Scott Mueller filed a lawsuit at the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York seeking to reverse his 2014 purchase of Noland's sculpture Log Cabin (1990) for $1.4million; he claimed that Nolan had "disavowed" the work by not approving the extensive restoration of the piece.[13] The artist disavowed her sculpture, following its sale to Mueller, because she believed the work had been restored "beyond recognition."[17] This restoration occurred following a long-term loan to Suermondt-Ludwig-Museum in Aachen, Germany, where the condition of the logs had deteriorated from 10 years of outdoor exposure. A conservator was consulted and hired to complete the restoration in Germany, where all of the decayed wood was replaced with logs obtained from the same Montana source as the original sculpture.[18] The artist, who believes she should have been consulted about this, felt the extensively restored piece was essentially recreated, and therefore, it was now an unauthorized copy of the original, violating her copyright protections as outlined in the Visual Artists Rights Act, a 1990 addition to the US Copyright law.[19]
Since the disavowal in 2016, the artist has been involved in complicated legal battles regarding the restoration of Log Cabin and the application of the copyright laws pertaining to the materials used in her sculpture, German vs. US laws, and her rights to copyright as a living contemporary artist.[20] A lawsuit was dismissed in June 2020 by a New York district court judge, who ruled that Noland's rights had not been violated.[17]
Several critics have suggested that Noland's legal disputes surrounding the sale, restoration, and treatment of various works, along with her longtime self-imposed distance from the traditional gallery ecosystem, are themselves a form of artistic statement and communication.[21][22] Writing for T: The New York Times Style Magazine, Zoë Lescaze posited, "She has become known as the art world’s boogeyman, but she might be its conscience."[23]
Exhibition history
The artist's first solo exhibition took place in 1989 at Colin de Land's American Fine Arts gallery in New York.[24]
The American Dream (2010–2011) was an exhibition of assemblages and silkscreens that showed Noland's practice from 1989 to 1995, the year of her last solo presentation in the Netherlands at Rotterdam's Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen.
Noland's first solo gallery show in the United States in over two decades, The Clip-On Method, opened at Galerie Buchholz in New York in 2021 and was accompanied by the publication of a two-volume artist's book of the same.[26]
Mosset, Olivier (1989). "Star Trek, Neo-Geo: The Next Generation". Bomb (29): 66–71. JSTOR40423901.
Korczynski, Jacob (Summer 2011). "Pierre Leguillon features Diane Arbus: A Printed Retrospective. 1960–1971 & Cady Noland: The American Dream". C: International Contemporary Art. 110: 47–48. ProQuest877969540.
Brazda, Bozidar; Josephine Meckseper (9 November 2015). "Cady Noland". Flash Art. Archived from the original on 5 November 2021. Retrieved 24 March 2022.
Lescaze, Zoë; David Breslin; Martha Rosler; Kelly Taxter; Rirkrit Tiravanija; Torey Thornton; Thessaly La Force (15 July 2019). "The 25 Works of Art That Define the Contemporary Age". T. The New York Times. Archived from the original on 1 February 2022. Retrieved 24 March 2022.
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