Anish Kapoor, Solo Exhibition

Exhibitions
May 19, 2012 - September 30, 2012

The PinchukArtCentre (Kyiv, Ukraine) presents the first comprehensive solo exhibition by Anish Kapoor in Eastern Europe. The show includes a selection of the artist’s most iconic works together with a new monumental steel work created specially for the PinchukArtCentre.

Download pdf-catalogue

Anish Kapoor is one of the most influential sculptors of his generation. Born in Bombay, he has lived and worked in London since the early 70’s. Kapoor sees his work as being engaged with deep-rooted metaphysical polarities; presence and absence, being and non-being, place and non-place and the solid and the intangible. His fascination with darkness and light is apparent throughout his work; the translucent quality of the resin works, the absorbent nature of the pigment, the radiant glow of alabaster and the fluid reflections of stainless steel and water. Through this interplay between form and light, he aspires to evoke sublime experiences, which address primal physical and psychological states.

Eckhard Schneider, General Director of the PinchukArtCentre: “I am extremely glad and proud that our young museum has the wonderful opportunity to present, with this major summer exhibition, outstanding works by one of the leading artist of our time. Like no other living artist, he has succeeded in creating a balance between the physical presence of the material and the sublime of the void. Anish Kapoor’s exhibition at the PinchukArtCentre opens a new brilliant chapter in our history.”

Anish Kapoor Solo Exhibition Film

Highlights of the exhibition are:

  • Between Shit and Architecture (2011), 12 monumental concrete mounds generated by the use of a new and specially developed technological process.
  • In Kapoor’s installation, Shooting into the Corner (2009), a cannon shoots projectiles of red wax into the corner of the gallery at regular intervals, relentlessly repeating this action. This is perhaps the most dramatic work of the exhibition, where the form of the work evolves continually through the accumulation of the wax, spreading across the walls and floor of the gallery.

The raw materials and seemingly random forms of the concrete works become a counterpoint to the perfect surface of the mirror works which dominate one floor of the PinchukArtCentre. The reflective surface distorts the space and constructs a dynamic interaction between the work, the architecture and the viewer.

While concrete, steel and wax forms are at the heart of the exhibition, a selection of 26 architectural models give a different view of Kapoor as an artist who is deeply interested in the public realm. They offer a unique insight into this area of his work and the artist’s approach to space on an architectural scale.

The focal point of this exhibition is commissioned new monumental steel, creating Kapoor’s central idea the simultaneity of inside and outside of a sculpture.

The exhibition at the PinchukArtCentre continues an international career which has spanned the last 30 years. As well as numerous solo exhibitions, Kapoor has created major installations for Tate Modern’s Turbine Hall as part of the Unilever Series and at the Grand Palais in Paris as part of Monumenta. He has created public sculptures, including Cloud Gate in Chicago’s Millennium Park and a 10-metre Sky Mirror which was installed at the Rockefeller Center, New York, in 2006 and at Kensington Gardens in London in 2010. Also in 2010 Temenos was unveiled in Middlesbrough, the first of a series of large-scale works for Tees Valley. His monumental work Orbit will be inaugurated at the Olympic Games in London in May 2012.

Anish Kapoor studied at the Hornsey College of Art and Chelsea School of Art. He quickly gained international attention and acclaim, representing Britain at the Venice Biennale in 1990, where he was awarded the Premio Duemila, and winning the Turner Prize in the following year. These successes launched his career and he has since become one of the most influential artists working today. He became a laureate in the field of sculpture of the global arts prize Praemium Imperiale (Japan) in 2011. More works by Anish Kapoor on Artsy

Anish Kapoor is one of the most influential sculptors of his generation. Born in 1954 in Bombay, he has lived in London since the early 1970s. Over the past twenty years he has exhibited extensively with solo shows at venues including Kunsthalle Basel, Tate, Hayward Gallery, Reina Sofia in Madrid, CAPC in Bordeaux, Haus der Kunst in Munich. In 2009 he was the first living artist to have a solo exhibition at the Royal Academy of Art in London, and in 2010 had his first major exhibition in India.

He has participated in many group shows internationally including those at Whitechapel Art Gallery, Serpentine Gallery in London, Documenta IX in Kassel, Moderna Museet in Stockholm and Jeu de Paume and Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris. He represented Britain at the Paris Biennale in 1982 and at the Venice Biennale in 1990, where he was awarded the ‘Premio Duemila’.

He won the Turner Prize in 1991 and received the prestigious Unilever Commission for the Turbine Hall at Tate Modern in 2002.  In 2011 he exhibited Leviathan as part of the Monumenta series at the Grand Palais, organised by the French Ministry for Culture and Communication.

Among his major permanent commissions is Cloud Gate (2004) for the Millennium Park in Chicago, Dismemberment Site I for the sculpture park The Farm, Kaipara Bay, New Zealand and Temenos in Middlesborough, unveiled in 2010, as the first of a series of large scale works for Tees Valley. Also in 2010 Kapoor was awarded the commission with Cecil Balmond for a permanent artwork for the London 2012 Olympic Park, Orbit.

He was awarded Honorary Fellowships by the London Institute and Leeds University (1997), University of Wolverhampton (1999) and the Royal Institute of British Architects (2001).  He was elected Royal Academician in 1999 and in 2003 was awarded a CBE . In 2009 he acted as Guest Artistic Director of the Brighton Festival, and in 2011 was awarded the Commander of the Order of Arts and Letters and the Premium Imperiale.

Anish Kapoor is represented by the Lisson Gallery, London; Gladstone Gallery, NewYork; Regen Projects, Los Angeles; Kukje Gallery, Seoul, SCAI the Bathhouse, Tokyo; Galleria Continua and Galleria Massimo Minini in Italy and Kamel Mennour in Paris.

Shooting Into the Corner, 2009, mixed media
Shooting Into the Corner, 2009, mixed media
Shooting Into the Corner, 2009, mixed media
Shooting Into the Corner, 2009, mixed media
States of Limbo, 2007, resin and paint
States of Limbo, 2007, resin and paint
Non-Object (Plane), 2010, stainless steel
Non-object (Door), 2008, Stainless steel
1000 Names, 1982 mixed media and pigment
Left: 1000 Names, 1982; Right: Void, 1989
Untitled, 2007
Left: Untitled, 2007; right: When I Am Pregnant, 1992-2005
Left: Untitled, 2007; right: When I Am Pregnant, 1992-2005
When I Am Pregnant, 1992-2005, fibreglass, wood and paint
Non-object (Door), 2008, Stainless steel
Untitled, 2012, stainless steel and gold
Untitled, 2008, aluminium and lacquer
Untitled, 2008, aluminium and lacquer
Between Shit and Architecture, 2010, сoncrete
Between Shit and Architecture, 2010, сoncrete
Between Shit and Architecture, 2010, сoncrete
Hall with the architectural models by Anish Kapoor
Hall with the architectural models by Anish Kapoor
Untitled, 2008, stainless steel
S-Curve, 2006, stainless steel
Left: Untitled, 2011; right: Whiteout, 2004
Untitled, 2011, alabaster
Whiteout, 2004, fibreglass and paint
The Earth, 1991, fibreglass and pigment
The Healing of St. Thomas, 1989, mixed media
Untitled, 2012, steel
Untitled, 2012, steel
1000 Names, 1982, mixed media and pigment
Left: Void, 1989; right: Untitled, 2007
Anish Kapoor, artist
Photos below are open for usage by mass media. When using photos, please, note copyright information:
Images provided by the PinchukArtCentre
© Anish Kapoor
Photo by Sergey Illin
The data has been copied
Photo for Media