Image of Gallery in South Kensington
Request to view at the Prints & Drawings Study Room, level C , Case MB2B, Shelf DR113, Box DW21

Wallpaper

1998 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Trockel is an internationally renowned German artist who is best known for her knitted 'paintings', her installations, and 'social sculptures'. She has explored gender issues in art history, and much of her works has parodied the materials and methods of Minimalist and Conceptual art.

This wallpaper was produced for Trockel's exhibition 'Bodies of Work 1986-1998' at the Whitechapel Art Gallery, London, December 1998- February 1999. The paper was used as the backdrop to related exhibits in the 'Egg Room' area of the Whitechapel show. The image on the paper is a photograph of a section of a work by Trockel, 'Egg Curtain', 1998, which consisted of chains of blown eggs threaded together and suspended like a beaded curtain. This was intended in part as a reference to the egg-shell works by Italian Conceptual artist Piero Manzoni, but it was also designed to parody the rigid formality, grid-like structure and heavy industrial materials which characterised much Minimalist sculpture. Indeed each sheet is square - again perhaps a deliberate reference to the Minimalist square and cube, since when hung the sheets do not produce a seamless repeating pattern, but make a virtue of their grid-like format where the joins are obvious.

This paper was made especially for the Whitechapel exhibition, and is one of a number of so-called 'artists' wallpapers', produced in the past decade, and designed specifically for exhibitions and installations rather than for commercial production and domestic use.


Object details

Category
Object type
Materials and techniques
Offset lithograph on paper
Brief description
Piece of wallpaper printed with 'Egg Curtain' motif, designed by Rosemarie Trockel, 1998.
Physical description
Square sheet of wallpaper printed with a photographic image of rows of eggs.
Dimensions
  • Height: 46.4cm
  • Width: 47.8cm
Production typeLimited edition
Credit line
Given by the Whitechapel Art Gallery
Object history
Historical significance: The 'Egg Curtain' (and the related egg works in the Whitechapel exhibition) was intended to refer to Piero Manzoni's sculptures and pictures made from eggs, but it also parodied the rigid formality and grid-like structure that characterised much Minimalist sculpture. The wallpaper sheets are themselves almost, but not quite, square, and being identical they do not form a traditional seamless repeating pattern when pasted on the wall; instead the joins create another subtle grid, again referring back to Minimalist structures.

The wallpaper was made especially for the Whitechapel exhibtion and surplus sheets were available for sale to the public (at £5.00 a sheet) for the duration of the show. It thus had another role as an artist's multiple, that is a modestly priced limited (but un-numbered) edition print.
Production
Attribution note: This wallpaper was produced for Trockel's exhibition 'Bodies of Work 1986-1998' at the Whitechapel Art Gallery, London, December 1998- February 1999. The paper was used as the backdrop to related exhibits in the 'Egg Room' area of the Whitechapel show. The image on the paper is a photograph of a section of a work by Trockel, 'Egg Curtain', 1998, which consisted of chains of blown eggs threaded together and suspended like a beaded curtain.
Reason For Production: exhibition
Subject depicted
Summary
Trockel is an internationally renowned German artist who is best known for her knitted 'paintings', her installations, and 'social sculptures'. She has explored gender issues in art history, and much of her works has parodied the materials and methods of Minimalist and Conceptual art.

This wallpaper was produced for Trockel's exhibition 'Bodies of Work 1986-1998' at the Whitechapel Art Gallery, London, December 1998- February 1999. The paper was used as the backdrop to related exhibits in the 'Egg Room' area of the Whitechapel show. The image on the paper is a photograph of a section of a work by Trockel, 'Egg Curtain', 1998, which consisted of chains of blown eggs threaded together and suspended like a beaded curtain. This was intended in part as a reference to the egg-shell works by Italian Conceptual artist Piero Manzoni, but it was also designed to parody the rigid formality, grid-like structure and heavy industrial materials which characterised much Minimalist sculpture. Indeed each sheet is square - again perhaps a deliberate reference to the Minimalist square and cube, since when hung the sheets do not produce a seamless repeating pattern, but make a virtue of their grid-like format where the joins are obvious.

This paper was made especially for the Whitechapel exhibition, and is one of a number of so-called 'artists' wallpapers', produced in the past decade, and designed specifically for exhibitions and installations rather than for commercial production and domestic use.
Associated object
E.459-1999 (Duplicate)
Collection
Accession number
E.458-1999

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Record createdOctober 28, 1999
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