Friday, Jun 6, 2025 from 10:00am to 6:00pm
Since her emergence in the late 1970s, Sherrie Levine has utilized diverse mediums to challenge conventional assumptions around autonomy, originality, and agency. Alongside contemporaries such as Cindy Sherman and Richard Prince who referenced the iconography of film and advertising, Levine turned her attention instead to the history of art. Probing the ways in which identity is generated through our relationship to images and forms, Levine’s works reckon with both the potentials and impediments of artistic production in the postmodern era.
The earliest work in this exhibition, Shoe Sale (1977), saw Levine selling seventy-five pairs of identical, store-bought children’s shoes at a storefront gallery in New York City. This established the artist’s enduring relationship with the readymade, an artistic development conceived in 1913 by Marcel Duchamp in which prefabricated objects are redefined as artworks through designatory and contextual shifts. This interest in framing connects to some of Levine’s most celebrated works, from her President Collages (1979) to her many projects replicating canonical artworks by artists ranging from Walker Evans to Egon Schiele. Strategies of appropriation—by which preexisting, mass-circulated images are re-presented with little or no modification—dismantle entrenched beliefs in monolithic, stable narratives. Levine contrarily demands a consideration and questioning of context and contingency. Seemingly straightforward acts of copying belie the enigmatic conceptual complexity at the heart of her practice. As she asked at the onset of the 1980s: “What is the same? What do we own?” Disarmingly simple, these questions remain provocative and profound.
Levine began painting in 1985, using checks, stripes, and chevrons in an array of colors. Continuing a dialogue with previous generations of (male) modernist painters but devoid of specific citations, the language of abstraction is emptied of any universal or transcendent aspirations. These paintings—produced in series, intimately scaled, eccentrically colored, and materially assertive—force the viewer to consider the aftermath of this legacy, in which the grandest of modernist ambitions have been replaced by questions of decoration, repetition, commodification, and play. On untreated expanses of plywood, Levine paints only the randomly distributed knot patches in her Knot Paintings (1985–87), allowing them to dictate the final form of the artwork. These works demonstrate an interest in chance that is present in the game board motif and are also a pun on “not painting.” Levine enacts an ultra-thin mediation in her work, through which distinguishing factors between her art and the original source material often sit beyond comprehension. Traditional beliefs in artist and artwork are upended, engendering a space that is simultaneously questioning, humorous, melancholic, and recuperative.
Sherrie Levine: 1977–1988 is curated by Scott Portnoy, Guest Curator.
Special thanks to Rowan Diaz-Toth, Brady Doty, Susan Dunne, Sarah Lili Frey, Kevin Haynie, Steve Henry, Simone Krug, Nicola Lees, Anna Martin, Daniel Merritt, and Joseph Montgomery .
Aspen Art Museum wishes to thank the lenders to Sherrie Levine: 1977–1988, including: The Art Institute of Chicago; The Broad Art Foundation; Alan Belcher; James Cahn and Jeremiah Collatz; Stan Cohen; Hall Collection; Bruce Hainley; Ronnie F. Heyman; Eleanor Heyman Propp; High Museum of Art, Atlanta; Glenstone Museum, Potomac; Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York; Marc Freidus and Sandra Gilbert Friedus; The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles; The Museum of Modern Art, New York; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; David Platzker; Joel Wachs; Walker Art Center, Minneapolis; Brian Wallis; Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; David Zwirner, New York; and those who wish to remain anonymous.
Aspen Art Museum exhibitions are made possible by the Marx Exhibition Fund. Support for artists is made possible by the Beckmann Kotzubei Artist Residency Fund.
Major support is provided by the Aspen Art Museum Exhibition Circle, with special thanks to H. Gael Neeson and Allison Rose.
General exhibition support is provided by the Toby Devan Lewis Visiting Artist Fund. Additional support is provided by the Aspen Art Museum National Council.
Aspen Art Museum admission is free courtesy of Amy and John Phelan.
About the artist
Sherrie Levine (b. 1947, Hazleton, Pennsylvania) has been the subject of solo exhibitions at institutions including the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York (2011); Museum Haus Lange, Krefeld (2010); San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (1991, 2009); Georgia O’Keeffe Museum, Santa Fe (2007); Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles (1995); The Menil Collection, Houston (1995); Portikus, Frankfurt (1994); Philadelphia Museum of Art (1993); Kunsthalle Zürich (1991); High Museum of Art, Atlanta (1988); Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, DC (1988); and the Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art, Hartford (1987). Her work is in the collections of museums including the Art Institute of Chicago; Centre Pompidou, Paris; The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; The Museum of Modern Art, New York; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York; Tate, United Kingdom; Walker Art Center, Minneapolis; and the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York. Levine currently lives and works in New York.
Dates: June 6 - September 29, 2025
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