ROY LICHTENSTEIN: BAUHAUS STAIRWAY MURAL

Gagosian is pleased to announce the installation of Roy Lichtenstein’s Bauhaus Stairway Mural (1989) at New York. This is the second time that Gagosian has exhibited a Lichtenstein mural, following the replication of Greene Street Mural (1983) at the same location in 2015.

September 8, 2023 - June 15, 2024

In the 1960s, Lichtenstein forged a new approach to painting by fusing popular culture and Western art history. His work is rooted in the seductive powers of advertising, and elevates the graphic imagery of popular print media and comic book illustrations to the realm of high art. Employing a handmade process, he mimicked the printing techniques of magazines and newspapers, making Benday dots and bright color synonymous with Pop art.

Lichtenstein’s mural was commissioned for the main atrium of the headquarters of the Creative Artists Agency (CAA) in Beverly Hills, which the building’s architect, I.M. Pei, envisioned as a meeting place for writers, directors, actors, musicians, and agents—an emphasis on cross-disciplinary interaction that resonated with Lichtenstein’s interest in accessible creative forms.

Founded by Walter Gropius in Weimar, Germany, in 1919, the Bauhaus school was devoted to uniting the fine and applied arts—a pedagogic vision that resonates with Lichtenstein’s intermingling of “high” and “low.” Schlemmer—who taught mural painting, stage design, and sculpture there— painted Bauhaustreppe shortly before the school’s 1933 closure by the Nazis.

With its imagery of modernist architecture, Schlemmer’s canvas—inspired by a photograph by fellow instructor T. Lux Feininger—represents the Bauhaus’s aspiration and achievement. The image of the banister expresses stability and direction in a chaotic period, while the geometric bodies of the students reflect Schlemmer’s belief in humanity as “an organic as well as mechanical creation.”

The figures in the lower right-hand corner and upper left-hand corner of Lichtenstein’s mural appear to reference Schlemmer’s costume designs and volumetric renderings, as well as Schlemmer’s interest in mechanical movement. Lichtenstein pays tribute to the German artist’s vision through a Pop aesthetic, using his own distinctive visual language to convey the Bauhaus’s innovative spirit.

Finally, both Schlemmer’s painting and Lichtenstein’s mural, through their depiction of a bustling common space primed for dialogue, collaborative effort, and upward movement, speak to a Gesamtkunstwerk, or total work of art, in which artists, designers, and artisans work together toward a single higher goal—an ethos that continuously guided the founders of CAA.

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