Mary Heilmann returns to our gallery on Limmatstrasse with an exhibition of more than 30 drawings made between 1975 and 2005. Expanding on the artist’s exhibition of works on paper, Daydream nation, at Hauser & Wirth New York last year, this presentation continues the recent in-depth exploration into Heilmann’s long-standing drawing practice and coincides with the release of a new publication from Hauser & Wirth Publishers, Mary Heilmann. Works on paper: 1973 – 2019.

Raised in San Francisco and Los Angeles, Heilmann (b. 1940) completed a degree in literature, before receiving her M.A. in ceramics and sculpture at the University of California, Berkeley. Only after moving to New York in 1968 did she begin to paint and in the early 1970s establish a drawing practice that continues to this day.

Ranging from watercolor studies to paintings on paper in their own right, Mary Heilmann. Works on paper brings together a selection of rarely and never-before-seen drawings that fluctuate in scale and materiality. The exhibition is a celebration of Heilmann’s talent for translating complex images and ideas into deceptively simple geometric forms and abstract gestural marks.

Many of Heilmann’s most well-known and admired series – Fans, chairs, serapes, grids – are represented in the installation as are drawings that have related works in important European museum collections. Untitled watercolor study (ca. 1983 – 1986) is one of two drawings in the exhibition that are part of a series of works by Heilmann in tribute to the Dutch painter Piet Mondrian that includes M. (1985), a painting in the collection of the Museum Kunstpalast. Islands, (1988), one of the larger watercolors on view, was made after Laurens (1986), an oil on canvas in the collection of the De Pont Museum.

The works on view not only demonstrate Heilmann’s work serially but also her tendency to revisit and reimagine certain arrangements of form and color. Made 15 years apart, Broken study (2005) is a recompilation of an early red, black and white composition, Untitled watercolor study (ca. 1989) and Heilmann’s web imagery seen in Blue net (1991).

As an artist known for working across mediums and for installations that playfully combine disparate works, the exhibition also includes a selection of ceramic Spots and sculptural chairs.