Sigmar Polke: Alibis 1963–2010

Publisher: The Museum of Modern Art, New York

Publish Date: 2014

Texts by Paul Chan, Christophe Cherix, Tacita Dean, Barbara Engelbach, Mark Godfrey, Stefan Gronert, Kathy Halbreich, Rachel Jans, John Kelsey, Jutta Koether, Christine Mehring, Matthias Mühling, Marcelle Polednik, Christian Rattemeyer, Kathrin Rottmann, Magnus Schaefer, and Lanka Tattersall. Bibliography by Erhard Klein. Interview with the artist by Benjamin H. D. Buchloh

Working across an unusually broad range of media, including painting, photography, film, drawing, and sculpture, Sigmar Polke is widely regarded as one of the most influential and experimental artists of the post-war generation. His irreverent wit and promiscuous intelligence, coupled with his exceptional grasp of the properties of his materials, provided the foundation for his punishing critiques of the conventions of art history and social behavior. Experimenting wildly with materials and tools as varied as meteor dust and the xerox machine, Polke made work of both an intimate and monumental scale, drawn from sources as diverse as newspaper headlines and Dürer prints. Polke avoided any one signature style, a fluid method best defined by the word “alibi,” which means “in or at another place.” This also is a reminder of the deflection of responsibility which shaped German behavior during the Nazi period, compelling Polke’s generation to reinvent the role of the artist. Published in conjunction with Alibis: Sigmar Polke 1963–2010, the first exhibition to encompass the artist’s work across all media, this richly illustrated publication provides an overview of his cross-disciplinary innovations and career. Essays by Kathy Halbreich, Associate Director of The Museum of Modern Art; Mark Godfrey, Curator of International Art, Tate Modern; and a range of scholars and artists examine the full range of Polke’s exceptionally inventive oeuvre and place his enormous skepticism of all social, political and artistic conventions against German history.

Details

Publisher: The Museum of Modern Art, New York

Artist: Sigmar Polke

Contributors: Benjamin H. D. Buchloh, Paul Chan, Christophe Cherix, Tacita Dean, Barbara Engelbach, Mark Godfrey, Stefan Gronert, Kathy Halbreich, Rachel Jans, Erhard Klein, Jutta Koether, Christine Mehring, Matthias Mühling, Marcelle Polednik, Christian Rattemeyer, Kathrin Rottmann, Magnus Schaefer, Lanka Tatersall

Publication Date: 2014

ISBN: 9780870708893

Retail: $75 | £50

Status: Not Available

Binding: Hardcover

Dimensions: 9 1/2 x 12 in (24.1 x 30.5 cm)

Pages: 320

Reproductions: 520 color

Artist and Contributors

Sigmar Polke

German artist Sigmar Polke (1941–2010) is widely recognized as one of the most innovative painters and multidisciplinary artists of the postwar era. Characterized by an experimental and inquisitive attitude, Polke's work engages unconventional and diverse materials and techniques and playfully defies social, political, and aesthetic conventions.

Benjamin H. D. Buchloh

Benjamin H.D. Buchloh has been the Andrew W. Mellon Professor of Modern Art at Harvard University since 2006. He is internationally recognized as one of the most important scholars of twentieth century art. Buchloh received his PhD from the City University of New York in 1994, and has since published widely on European and American artists including Gerhard Richter, Hans Haacke, and Andy Warhol. He is the co-editor of the art journal October, and he was awarded the Golden Lion Award for Contemporary Art History and Criticism at the Venice Biennale in 2007. He is also the recipient of numerous other grants, including Getty, CASVA, and Lehman Foundation fellowships, and an elected member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.

Paul Chan

Christophe Cherix

Tacita Dean

Barbara Engelbach

Mark Godfrey

Stefan Gronert

Kathy Halbreich

Rachel Jans

Erhard Klein

Jutta Koether

Christine Mehring

Christine Mehring holds a PhD from Harvard University and is Department Chair and Professor of Art History at the University of Chicago with interests in postwar European art, abstraction, design, and the relationship between new and old media. Mehring has written extensively on Palermo, including the monograph Blinky Palermo: Abstraction of an Era (2008). In 1999, she curated the exhibition Wols Photographs at the Harvard University Art Museum, and she regularly contributes to exhibition catalogues and publications including Artforum.

Matthias Mühling

Marcelle Polednik

Christian Rattemeyer

Kathrin Rottmann

Magnus Schaefer

Lanka Tatersall

$75