National Museum of Art, Tokyo

Thomas Struth  (German, born Geldern, 1954)

Date:
1999
Medium:
Chromogenic print
Dimensions:
179.4 x 276.9 cm (70 5/8 x 109 in. )
Classification:
Photographs
Credit Line:
Purchase, Jennifer and Joseph Duke, Joyce and Robert Menschel, and Anonymous Gifts, Gift of Dr. Mortimer D. Sackler, Theresa Sackler and Family, and Fletcher and Harris Brisbane Dick Funds, 2001
Accession Number:
2001.475
Rights and Reproduction:
© Thomas Struth courtesy of Marian Goodman Gallery, New York
  • Description

    Throughout the 1990s Struth photographed people in museums, cathedrals, and other shrines that function as tourist meccas for the secular religion of art. The subject of this work is half of a Japanese-French exchange of treasures. The Japanese sent their prized eighth-century bodhisattva from Nara to the Louvre, where it was encased in bulletproof glass and displayed in an incongruously ornate Second Empire gallery. Struth's photograph shows the French contribution, also behind glass, in the hall the Japanese designed to exhibit it.
    Quintessentially Gallic, Delacroix's 1830 painting Liberty Leading the People is a hymn to the supreme rights of the individual, shot through with sex and high drama. The mise-en-scène, however, is an uncanny reflection of late twentieth-century spectacle culture - the movie theater, where the crowd passively absorbs images on a glowing screen. Yet, Struth is not simply demonstrating the collision between Delacroix's characters, who rush forward into history, and those who are immobilized in the face of it; he also discerns a respectful distance on the part of the Japanese toward their visitor, an appreciation of difference and cultural specificity that is a key to this artist's work.

  • Signatures, Inscriptions, and Markings

    Inscription: Signed on printed label affixed to frame, verso BR: "Th Struth"; printed label text: "THOMAS STRUTH [underlined] // NATIONAL MUSEUM OF ART // Tokyo, 1999 // ED: 5/10"; numbered in green ink on frame, verso BRC: "5/10"

  • Provenance

    the artist; [Marian Goodman Gallery, New York]

190037936

Close