Marking the closing of the exhibition ‘Dieter Roth. Islandscapes’, please join us for a screening of filmmaker Edith Jud’s 2003 documentary ‘Dieter Roth’ at Hauser & Wirth 18th Street.
Through archival footage and interviews with Roth’s friends and companions—as well as extensive conversations with his son, Björn, who worked with Roth for the last 20 years of his life—Jud’s film presents a fascinating portrayal of a truly singular artist. Viewers will embark on a journey exploring the link between Roth’s peripatetic life and his expansive, genre-bending oeuvre.
This event is free to attend, however reservations are required.
‘DIETER ROTH’
Directed by Edith Jud
2003
1 hr 58 min
About ‘Dieter Roth. Islandscapes’
Hauser & Wirth presents ‘Dieter Roth. Islandscapes’ at 443 West 18th Street. Renowned for his adventurous experimentation with both materials and subject matter, Dieter Roth (b. 1930 Hanover, Germany) generated a multifaceted oeuvre that transcends boundaries between painting, sculpture, design, literature, poetry and music. Featuring a selection of graphic works, monoprints, multiples and unique pieces spanning from the early 1960s to 1975, ‘Islandscapes’ focuses on Roth’s printmaking, which accompanied every phase of his life and practice. By centering works which engage with the landscape genre, this presentation displays the artist’s heterogenous techniques and illustrates the tremendous radicality of his approach.
About Dieter Roth
One of the most influential artists of the post-World War II period, Dieter Roth was born in Hanover, Germany, in 1930, to a German mother and a Swiss father, and died in Basel, Switzerland in 1998. Dieter Roth was an artist of an immense diversity and breadth, producing books, graphics, drawings, paintings, sculptures, assemblages, installations, audio and media works involving slides, sound recordings, film and video. He also worked as a composer, poet, writer and musician. He often collaborated with other artists, subverting the principle of authorship. Those partners included such significant figures as Richard Hamilton, Emmett Williams, Arnulf Rainer, and Hermann Nitsch. But it was Roth's long and symbiotic collaboration with his son, artist Björn Roth, that stands as testament to the enormous and enduring potency of his restless, relentless process.
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