Open: Tue-Sat 10.30am-7pm

Via Francesco Crispi 16, 00187, Rome, Italy
Open: Tue-Sat 10.30am-7pm


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Gerhard Richter: Moving Picture (946-3) Kyoto Version

Gagosian, Rome

Fri 6 Dec 2024 to Sat 1 Feb 2025

Via Francesco Crispi 16, 00187 Gerhard Richter: Moving Picture (946-3) Kyoto Version

Tue-Sat 10.30am-7pm

Artist: Gerhard Richter

Gagosian presents Gerhard Richter’s Moving Picture (946-3) Kyoto Version (2019–24), an immersive installation in film and sound that fills the entire exhibition space in Rome. This is the gallery debut of Moving Picture (946-3) Kyoto Version and the artist’s first gallery exhibition in Italy since 1983.

Installation Views

Moving Picture (946-3) Kyoto Version is the immersive, experiential apotheosis of Richter’s Strip project, which he began working on in 2010 following his discovery of digital tools for mining existing paintings for new artistic strategies. The Strip series was initiated when the artist digitally fractured the photographic image of a canvas into progressively smaller divisions which he then doubled, or mirrored, across expansive surfaces. This process opened up a world of new possibilities that resulted in the Strip paintings (2011–16), as well as books, prints, tapestries, and STRIP-TOWER (2023), a monumental sculpture now on view at Serpentine, London.

Moving Picture (946-3) Kyoto Version consists of a film, made in collaboration with Corinna Belz, projected at a monumental 22-meters (more than 72 feet) wide and accompanied by a score for trumpet composed by Rebecca Saunders and recorded by Marco Blaauw. Six speakers surround the viewer, giving a physical force and presence to the music. Previously, Richter’s experimentations in combining image and sound into immersive experiences have resulted in temporary works at the Manchester International Festival (in 2015, with Arvo Pärt) and The Shed, New York (in 2019, with Pärt and Steve Reich).

Throughout his storied career, Richter has consistently revitalized painting through an analytical exploration of the potentials of photography, chance occurrence, and systematic processes, all of which find their ultimate expression in Moving Picture. In the 1960s he harnessed found magazine and newspaper photographs as source imagery for his paintings, while in the 1970s he took pictures of his own paintings and vastly enlarged minute details of their brushstrokes. Richter has long found generative possibilities in the chance arrangements of color grids, first with his Color Chart paintings of the 1960s and later with 4900 Colors (2007) and the Cologne Cathedral Window (2007). Like the last of these projects, Moving Picture is a work in light, illuminating the infinite beauty of chance.

Gerhard Richter, Moving Picture (946-3) Kyoto Version, Installation view, 2024. Photo: Matteo D'Eletto M3 Studio. Courtesy Gagosian and the artist

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