Bruce Nauman's Legacy Explored in Group Exhibition at Zwirner & Wirth
The exhibition "Yes Bruce Nauman" at Zwirner & Wirth highlights the impact of Nauman on modern art, featuring works from nineteen artists. Notable pieces include Jessica Diamond's painting from 1989 and Mungo Thomson's window installation that references Nauman's neon piece from 1967. Neon artworks by Glenn Ligon, Peter Coffin, and Stefan Bruggemann, such as Bruggemann's "No No No No" (2005), are also on display. Original neon works by Nauman from 1968 and 1972 are included, along with Charles Ray's "Plank Piece I-II" and Francesco Vezzoli's video inspired by Nauman's 1969 film. Other participants are Jan Mancuska, Aaron Young, and Martin Creed. The exhibition is open until September 9, 2006, at 32 East 69th Street, New York. Phone: 212-517-8677.
Key facts
- Exhibition "Yes Bruce Nauman" features Bruce Nauman with nineteen other artists
- Show runs until September 9, 2006 at Zwirner & Wirth gallery
- Location: 32 East 69th Street, New York, between Madison and Park Avenues
- Includes Jessica Diamond's 1989 painting that gives the exhibition its title
- Features two original Bruce Nauman neon works from 1968 and 1972
- Mungo Thomson creates window installation quoting Nauman's 1967 neon work
- Stefan Bruggemann's neon piece references Nauman's 1987 performance video
- Exhibition explores Nauman's influence on performance, neon, and conceptual art
Entities
Artists
- Bruce Nauman
- Jessica Diamond
- Mungo Thomson
- Glenn Ligon
- Peter Coffin
- Rirkrit Tiravanija
- Stefan Bruggemann
- Charles Ray
- Francesco Vezzoli
- Paul McCarthy
- Mike Kelley
- Jan Mancuska
- Aaron Young
- Jason Rhoades
- Martin Creed
- Gertrude Stein
- Goya
Institutions
- Zwirner & Wirth
- New York Sun
- artcritical
- New Museum
Locations
- New York
- United States
- San Francisco
- California
- Byzantium
- Egypt