David Zwirner presents two exhibitions of paintings by On Kawara (1932–2014), on view concurrently at the gallery’s London and Paris locations. The presentations are organized in collaboration with the One Million Years Foundation, established by the artist during his lifetime to ensure the legacy of his work and fluid approach to his practice. These exhibitions are the gallery’s first presentations of Kawara’s work since his death in 2014 and offer a rare opportunity to view two significant bodies of paintings by the artist.
Over more than five decades, Kawara developed a distinct and highly nuanced form of artistic expression that engaged with chronological time and its function as a measure of human existence. A key figure in the conceptual art movement that emerged in New York in the 1960s, the artist created a significant body of work organized into discrete series that together form a meditative examination of time and place. At once specific and universal, rigorous and expansive, Kawara’s work encompasses the simultaneous mundanity and vastness of lived experience, and allows for a multiplicity of meanings.
On view in London are twenty-four paintings from Kawara’s signature Today series—known collectively as his Date Paintings. Deceptively simple, each composition—which consists of a calendar date rendered in a distinctive sans serif typeface created by the artist against a monochromatic ground in one of three colors—is the result of an established protocol and series of decisions that are at once highly ordered and situationally responsive. Each of the paintings conforms to one of eight standard sizes and was carefully executed by hand on the date documented on the canvas (if the work was not completed by midnight, the canvas would be destroyed). As part of his process, Kawara would mix the color for each individual composition, meticulously overlaying the date in white lettering in the language and grammatical conventions of the country in which it is made (Esperanto is substituted when the primary language of the country he was in did not use the Roman alphabet).
Spanning almost the entire range of this body of work from 1966, the year Kawara began the series, to 2012, shortly before its conclusion, the exhibition will feature a representative selection that includes several large-scale paintings, a diptych made in Mexico City in April 1968, and one painting from every year of the 1970s. Viewed together, these paintings showcase both the formal and conceptual breadth of this decades-long project. Through their straightforward and direct composition, these works suggest a profound message, addressing not only the passage of time but the nature of consciousness itself. As curator Jeffrey Weiss notes, “On the one hand, the painting attempts to hold, or seize, a given day. It represents the day on which it was made, and if it’s not finished by the time the day comes to an end, it is destroyed. On the other hand, of course, the day itself is something that has already passed by the time the painting is experienced by us. Time can’t be stopped.”
The presentation in Paris features four rarely seen early paintings made by Kawara in Tokyo in 1955 and 1956. For the young artist, an active and vocal participant in the city’s avant-garde, painting provided an avenue for thinking through the palpable collective trauma that loomed over his native country in the postwar years. Kawara quickly distinguished himself from his peers; rather than depicting atrocities that remained fresh in the minds of Japanese citizens, the artist chose to evoke their psychological resonances, marshaling form and content in service of one another to channel the elusive feelings of unease, anger, and disillusionment. These enigmatic and highly accomplished works, which count among the earliest known instances of an artist working on shaped canvases, simultaneously seem to collapse and expand space, drastically unmooring the viewer’s understanding of perspective and testifying to the experience of a particular time and place.
In the mid-1960s, prior to beginning his Date Paintings, Kawara donated the majority of his extant works from the 1950s to The National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo—almost as a ritual of closure before he moved into a new phase of artistic production. He kept fewer than ten paintings from this period, including those that will be on view in Paris. Featuring easily identifiable and recurrent motifs—such as worms and maggots, domestic furniture, and empty dishes—that collide with kaleidoscopically patterned, claustrophobic settings, these vivid compositions seem to stand in diametric opposition to the straightforward works for which Kawara would later become known. Yet, in many ways these paintings inform that which followed, demonstrating the artist’s nascent interest in themes that he would later elaborate to great effect, including serial repetition, abstracted forms, chromatic expression, and existentialism.