Rita Ackermann

Doubles

11 June – 4 October 2025

Paris

Dates

11 June – 4 October 2025

In her first exhibition at Hauser & Wirth’s Paris gallery, Rita Ackermann presents a new series of paintings and large, related works on paper that take up the theme of the double. In the works on view, Ackermann does not just evoke the presence of a dual entity but unveils its structure. Innovative in their unexpected combinations of materials and defined by a sharp conceptual tension, these works draw inspiration from two giants of French culture—Jean-Luc Godard and Paul Virilio. The results are as unsettling as they are exacting.

Ackermann’s Doubles (2024 – 2025) bespeak things that bedevil one another: a present the artist can never be at one with; a past that disallows any full disencumbering—images so well-known that they might be better forgotten. What force drives such image-making, if not a desire to capture the nuances of an ever-shifting reality dominated by a sense of absences and displacements? In these new works, shapes invert, colors reverse, images can be read as positives or negatives. In some of them, contour lines entrance, forming figures both elastic and weightless, always on the verge of vanishing. In others, pigment reduces bodies to a few restless, contorted shapes. Everything about these Doubles not only turns the tables on their beholders, but also subverts established ways of interpreting works of art. Even their title misleads, for these Doubles have as little to do with mirrors as with alter egos. Instead, these images of images fluctuate between remaining a nascent specter and the moment when that mental projection gains substance, doubling into a recognizable thing, as in cinema.

The artist’s concern with such visual phenomena is not merely conceptual. Its origins reach back to impulses that began to structure her life, when she relocated from Budapest to New York City. From then on, she began to exist in a median state, defined by a double set of experiences: the one, anchored in a soft-Communist upbringing; the other, a coming of age as an artist in the dream factory of the Big Apple, where she chose to remain. The dialectic between those two beginning points also left a deep mark on her first body of work (1993 – 1995): the adolescent girls who would become the springboard for much that followed, for example, ‘Doubles 8’ (2025). Its flattened, almost transhuman forms appear as though enlargements on a screen that slides in and out of view. Overlapping and instable, like their predecessors these girls are nothing if not clones.

ARTWORKS

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About the Artist

Rita Ackermann

Rita Ackermann (b. 1968, Budapest, Hungary) immigrated from Hungary to New York in 1992, where a formative body of work positioned her within the cultural zeitgeist of the city. At the outset of her early career, a breakthrough series of paintings—composed of bold contour lines and semi-transparent bodies—anticipated aesthetic and technological shifts that have proven remarkably timeless.

Though Ackermann’s works may be recursive, they are anchored by improvisation, disruption, and formal negation—the protein of her aesthetic. These elements were shaped in part by her engagement with cinema, particularly the films of Jean-Luc Godard and the theories of Paul Virilio, who viewed perception as structured by montage and fragmentation.

Ackermann’s paintings continue to bear the imprint of visual phenomena—not only in their subject, but in their structure. Images operate cryptically, fractured and charged with interior volatility. Their continual appearance and disappearance suggest that suspension, rather than development, is central to her method. The upshot has been a sustained visual practice that subtly confronts the tensions of the present.

Current Exhibitions