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Installation view Friedrich Petzel Gallery

Installation view
Friedrich Petzel Gallery
2011

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Installation view Friedrich Petzel Gallery

Installation view
Friedrich Petzel Gallery
2011

Inquire
Installation view Friedrich Petzel Gallery

Installation view
Friedrich Petzel Gallery
2011

Inquire
Installation view Friedrich Petzel Gallery

Installation view
Friedrich Petzel Gallery
2011

Inquire
Installation view Friedrich Petzel Gallery

Installation view
Friedrich Petzel Gallery
2011

Inquire
Untitled 1978 Silkscreen on linen

Untitled
1978
Silkscreen on linen
27.17 x 39.37 inches

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Untitled ca. 1980

Untitled
ca. 1980
Silkscreen on linen
42.13 x 120.08 inches

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Untitled 1982 Acrylic/Videorot Trevira Television CS

Untitled
1982
Acrylic/Videorot Trevira Television CS
86.61 x 86.61 inches

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Untitled 1982 Silkscreen on linen

Untitled
1982
Silkscreen on linen
47.05 x 66.14 inches

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Untitled 1983 Silkscreen on linen

Untitled
1983
Silkscreen on linen
39.37 x 68.7 inches

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Nest 1 1986

Nest 1
1986
Silkscreen on linen
39.37 x 68.7 inches

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Station of the Cross

Station of the Cross
1986
Silkscreen on linen
53.35 x 67.91 inches

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Untitled 1987 Silkscreen on linen

Untitled
1987
Silkscreen on linen
65.35 x 34.25 inches

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Untitled 1990 Silkscreen on linen

Untitled
1990
Silkscreen on linen
44.09 x 53.15 inches

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Untitled 1990 Silkscreen on linen

Untitled
1990
Silkscreen on linen
57.09 x 57.09 inches

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Untitled 1994 Black canvas

Untitled
1994
Black canvas
62 x 98 inches

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Untitled 1982 Silkscreen on linen

Untitled
1982
Silkscreen on linen
43.31 x 50.39 inches

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Untitled 1984 Silkscreen on linen

Untitled
1984
Silkscreen on linen
57.28 x 73.43 inches

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Untitled 1985 Silkscreen on linen

Untitled
1985
Silkscreen on linen
57.28 x 60.24 inches

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Untitled 1982 Silkscreen on linen

Untitled
1982
Silkscreen on linen
48 x 48 inches

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Untitled 1982 Silkscreen on linen

Untitled
1982
Silkscreen on linen
48 x 48 inches

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Dark Star VI

Dark Star VI
1979 - 1983
Collage
20 7/8 x 16 3/8 inches

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Dark Star VII

Dark Star VII
1979 - 1983
Collage
20 7/8 x 16 3/8 inche

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Dark Star VIII

Dark Star VIII
1979 - 1983
Collage
20 7/8 x 16 3/8 inches

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Dark Star IX

Dark Star IX
1979 - 1983
Collage
20 7/8 x 16 3/8 inches

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Dark Star X

Dark Star X
1979 - 1983
Collage
20 7/8 x 16 3/8 inches

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Dark Star XI

Dark Star XI
1979 - 1983
Collage
20 7/8 x 16 3/8 inches

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Dark Star XII

Dark Star XII
1979 - 1983
Collage
20 7/8 x 16 3/8 inches

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Dark Star XIII

Dark Star XIII
1979 - 1983
Collage
20 7/8 x 16 3/8 inches

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Dark Star XIV

Dark Star XIV
1979 - 1983
Collage
20 7/8 x 16 3/8 inches

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Dark Star XV

Dark Star XV
1979 - 1983
Collage
20 7/8 x 16 3/8 inches

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Dark Star XVI

Dark Star XVI
1979 - 1983
Collage
20 7/8 x 16 3/8 inches

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Dark Star XVII

Dark Star XVII
1979 - 1983
Collage
20 7/8 x 16 3/8 inches

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Press Release

Friedrich Petzel Gallery is pleased to announce the second solo exhibition of work by the London-based artist John Stezaker.

John Stezaker has been highly influential in the key artistic developments of the last three decades from Conceptual art and Appropriation to the re-emergence of collage. For his second solo show in New York, Stezaker will be showing a selection of silkscreens that were made between 1979 and 1992 and a selection of collages from his ‘Dark Star’ series from 1979 to 1983.

Both the silkscreens and the ‘Dark Star’ collages come from a period of time in which Stezaker was a frequent visitor to New York, and both bodies of work bear the imprint of the city. Stezaker’s encounter with New York and its culture in the late 70’s and early 80’s proved to be momentous and inspiring. It not only represented his first comprehensive encounter with American Modernism (especially Warhol and Newman) but was also his first encounter with his American counterparts in Appropriation (Goldstein, Prince, Longo, Kruger, and Levine).

In 1979 Stezaker described New York as ‘a city of voyeurs’ and his ‘Dark Star’ works are testimony to his observation. The absented (cut-out) figures of the ‘Dark Stars’ convert the object of spectacle - the star - into a voyeuristic shadow figure. The remaining photographic aura or spotlight, separated from its figure, cuts the image off from its function in portraiture to become an object of independent, autonomous fascination: they echo what Stezaker has described as ‘the dark aura of fascination.’ It was Stezaker’s contact with New York during this period that confirmed his desire to follow the image: to put aside conceptual ideas about the image, to yield to its pure fascination and to work within the horizons of the found image. Color appeared in his work for the first time, both in the small-scale collages and in the silkscreens, and in both, it was the color of the city at night – of neon and technicolor.


The silkscreens are the only period in his career in which he has worked primarily on a large scale and in color. By 1983-4, the disembodied heads of cinematic voyeurs and kissing couples were replaced by the multiple headless torsos on silkscreen prints, using images from nudist magazines and soft-porn ‘art studies.’ Following these, it was the baby heads and then the abstract spheres that went on to punctuate his multiple image silkscreens. But whatever the image that dominates each development of the silkscreens, there is a continual return to a dialogue with modernist painting and geometric abstraction, culminating in the final shaped monochrome canvases, shown here for the first time.

John Stezaker has had numerous solo exhibitions, most recently at The Approach, London; Galerie Gisela Capitain, Köln; and Capitain Petzel, Berlin. An overview of his work will be presented at the Whitchapel Gallery, London, in 2011, and will travel to Musée d’Art Moderne- Grand Duc Jean (Mudam), Luxembourg, and the Kemper Museum, Washington University St. Louis, St. Louis. His works are included in the public collections of the Museum of Modern Art, New York, the Tate Collection, London, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the Ellipse Foundation, Cacais, and the Rubell Family Collection, Miami. He lives and works in London.

Friedrich Petzel Gallery is located at 537 West 22nd Street (between 10th and 11th Avenues) New York, NY 10011. The gallery is open to the public from Tuesday through Saturday, 10:00 AM – 6:00 PM. For further information, please contact the gallery at info@petzel.com, or call (212) 680-9467.