- Edward Kienholz
Edward Kienholz (
October 23 ,1927 –June 10 ,1994 ) was an American installationartist whose work was highly critical of aspects of modern life. He often collaborated with his wife, Nancy Reddin Kienholz, from 1972 until his death. Collectively, they are referred to as "Kienholz".Early life and artistic development
Edward Kienholz was born in
Fairfield, Washington in 1927. He grew up on a farm in the eastern part of the state, learningcarpentry and mechanical skills in his youth. He studied at Eastern Washington College of Education and, briefly, atWhitworth College in Spokane, but did not receive any formal artistic training. After a series of odd jobs, such as a nurse in a psychiatric hospital, the manager of a dance band, a used car salesman, a caterer, a decorator and a vacuum cleaner salesman, Kienholz settled inLos Angeles , where he became involved with the arts.Together with other
avant-garde artists in the area, he opened art galleries. In 1956 he founded theNOW Gallery . In 1957 Kienholz started theFerus Gallery withWalter Hopps . In 1961 he completed his first installation, "Roxys", which caused a stir at thedocumenta 4 exhibition in 1968.Despite his lack of formal artistic training, Kienholz began to employ his mechanical and carpentry skills in making
collage paintings andrelief s assembled from materials salvaged from the alleys and sidewalks of the city. In 1960 he withdrew from the Ferus Gallery to concentrate on his art, creating free-standing, large-scale environmental tableaux. Kienholz's assemblages offound object s—the detritus of modern existence, often including figures cast from life—are at times vulgar, brutal, and gruesome, confronting the viewer with questions about human existence and the inhumanity of twentieth-century society. Because of their satirical and antiestablishment tones, his works have often been linked to thefunk art movement based inSan Francisco in the 1960s. ["Minimal Art," "The Oxford Companion to Twentieth-century Art", ed. Harold Osborne (Oxford: Oxford UP, 1981) 376.]Collaboration with Nancy Reddin
In the early 1970s, Kienholz received a grant that permitted him to work in
Berlin with his wife and collaborator,Nancy Reddin , whom he met in 1972 inLos Angeles . Their work has been widely acclaimed, particularly inEurope . His most important works during this period were theVolksempfänger s (radio receiving apparatus from the National Socialist period inGermany ). In 1973 he was guest artist of theGerman Academic Exchange Service in Berlin, and in 1975 he received aGuggenheim Award . In 1977 he opened "The Faith and Charity" inHope Gallery with Nancy Reddin. From the time of the exhibitionDie Kienholz-Frauen at theGalerie Maeght in Zurich, 1981, his work was co-authorized with his wife. In 1973, Kienholz and Reddin moved fromLos Angeles to Hope, Idaho and for the next twenty years they divided their time between Berlin and Idaho. Kienholz died inIdaho in 1994.References
External links
* [http://x-traonline.org/past_articles.php?articleID=48 "Good morning, my name is Ed Kienholz...: Issues of the Artist's Self-Presentation"] , "Illustrated essay by Damon Willick from X-TRA Contemporary Art Quarterly
* [http://noskoff.lib.ru/pina/KIENHOLZ/index.htm Objects]
* [http://www.lothar-wolleh.de/readymade/kienholz_r1_c1.jpgPortray Kienholz]
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