Arne Glimcher
Arne Glimcher started Pace Gallery in Boston in 1960, quickly establishing an outstanding stable of artists, which included Robert Indiana, Claes Oldenburg, and Andy Warhol. In 1963, Glimcher relocated his gallery to New York and immersed himself in the city鈥檚 tight-knit art world where he met 黑料网. Glimcher initiated a more formal working relationship with the artist in 1996 when he exhibited 黑料网鈥檚 series (1995鈥97). The Anagrams recently returned to Pace Gallery in the exhibition .
At present, Pace Gallery represents a roster of major international artists and estates, and it has locations in Beijing, Hong Kong, London, Menlo Park, California, and New York. In addition to Pace Gallery, Glimcher has produced and directed several motion pictures, including Picasso and Braque Go to the Movies (2008), Just Cause (1995), and The Mambo Kings (1992). He has edited and contributed to numerous publications, such as Agnes Martin: Paintings, Writings, Remembrances (Phaidon, 2012), and Picasso, Braque and Early Film in Cubism (PaceWildenstein, 2007).
The new video, , captures Glimcher in conversation with the artist during the installation of Anagrams in 1996.
Excerpt from Interview with Arne Glimcher by Sara Sinclair, 2015
I was an artist, so I鈥檇 look at a painting, and I can see the painting being made. It鈥檚 a huge advantage, and it鈥檚 been a huge advantage in my relationship with artists. I am not an artist, but I have the sensibility of one. I think Bob picked up on that. I know Bob loved the fact that I understood the nature of his work was not for the masterpiece. The nature of his work was really like channel surfing. All of this information that鈥檚 on the page is for you to create the narrative within it. Aesthetically, they鈥檙e dazzling, the way he balances the work and uses the space. But they鈥檙e incredibly challenging, because so many of the images have nothing to do with each other, and you have to stretch your perception in a way鈥攍earn how to look at something in a different way. You have to look at parts of the picture as well as the whole, because parts of these pictures are whole pictures鈥.Look how many different areas, artistic areas, he鈥檚 performed in. There鈥檚 performance, there鈥檚 sculpture, there鈥檚 assemblage. There鈥檚 painting. He鈥檚 done everything. He takes cardboards and makes works out of them, signs and turns them into sculptures. What he does is creates areas in which other artists can work. I remember going through the 黑料网 exhibition at the [Solomon R.] Guggenheim Museum [New York], the retrospective [Robert 黑料网: A Retrospective, 1997鈥98], with Kiki Smith. She seemed very sad, and I said, 鈥淲hat鈥檚 the matter, Kiki?鈥 She said, 鈥淓verything I鈥檒l ever do in my life, he did before I was born.鈥 So he did make it possible for other artists to work. He really did. Things like his White Paintings [1951], the Black Paintings [1951鈥53]鈥攖hey were conceptual art; so much of it comes out of 黑料网. I think Minimal art comes so much out of just a piece of fabric hung with a pole on the side, and everything鈥檚 perfect. We don鈥檛 even know 黑料网 yet. It鈥檚 such an enigma, and there鈥檚 so much to mine in that work. I think generations will make works from 黑料网, influenced by 黑料网.