Monday, November 26, 2007

Mehretu Painted Big

Julie Mehretu was born in 1970 in Ethiopia. She was raised in Michigan and was educated at Kalamazoo College and at Rhode Island School of Design. She now lives and works in New York City where she shares her studio with her partner, who also an artist, Jessica Rankin.

Mehretu uses signs and symbols and pairs them with architectural imagery to create her elaborate paintings. Mehretu's work combines maps, urban-planning grids, and architectural forms to convey historical narratives and fictional landscapes. Mehretu creates paintings that combine abstract forms with the familiar, such as the Roman Coliseum and floor plans from international airports. She is simultaneously engaged with the formal concerns of color and line and the social concerns of power, history, globalism, and personal narrative. According to Mehretu, she is interested in "the multifaceted layers of place, space, and time that impact the formation of personal and communal identity."

The underlying structure of her work consists of socially charged public spaces, such as, government buildings, museums, stadiums, schools, and airports, all drawn in the form of maps and diagrams. After building a base of several layers of these structures, Mehretu maps out her large swirling clouds. Much like the human population of a geographical area, these large areas of marks are comprised of individuals – individuals who are capable of social change. These clouds become tribes, nations, and entire cultures capable of growth, trade, movement, conflict or extinction.

What the viewer can appreciate about the work is that in spite of its complexity, Mehretu strives to give her viewer some sort of entry point - whether it is an architectural element or a specific color or shape. The “Stadia” series does just that. The architectural elements in the “Stadia” triptych are tracings of every stadium imaginable – from ancient amphitheaters to the most recently constructed sports arenas. These structures are capable of housing an infinitely large audience and serves as the theater for some super spectacle. Because the stadium renderings are renderings not technical drawings, the Stadia series begins as literally a collection of viewpoints. Strung across the open fields are rows and rows of pennants, flags and abstract shapes and colors that reference elements from the flag of every nation on earth. There is something for all spectators regardless of city or country of origin. Somewhere in these rows of colors, there is an element or structure a spectator can recognize and relate to.



Istanbul







Renegade Delirium



Renegade Excavation



Stadia 1



Stadia 2



Stadia 3

Tuesday, November 20, 2007

Saville Painted Big

Jenny Saville was born in Cambridge, England in 1970. She earned her BA in Fine Art from Glasgow School of Art in Scotland in 1992. During this time she was awarded a scholarship to study at the University of Cincinnati. She has been featured in multiple group exhibitions, including the Young British Artists III at the Saatchi Gallery in London and solo shows in New York. Her paintings are often of the body in some state of vulnerability, whether a nude or the body after a physical trauma. These works are monumental in scale and confront the viewer with images that contest conventional ideals of beauty, conventions of sexuality, transformation, mutilation and violence to the body. Saville states, “I like the spaces that a large scale offers. The different space of encountering a painting from a distance to being very close up to a painting, the physical relationship of your body to that scale of object and mark – making.” Looking at her work close – up the physical application of the paint can be seen. The sculptural layering of paint and color is dense and thick in certain areas as it corresponds to the density of the flesh of the subject. The marks are made in patchy and blotchy strokes that create volume and weight to the images.
The body, specifically the female body, is prevalent in her paintings. In Branded and Plan she confronts the issues of body image, gender and questions the standards of beauty in society. In Plan she uses her own body as subject with contour lines draw on the surface. The lines are to resemble the marks drawn on before the body a surgical procedure, such as, liposuction. The vulnerability of and ability to alter the body are highlighted in this work. By depicting physical imperfections Saville challenges the idea of beauty, as it is associated with the male ideal of the female form and how imperfections and individualism can be beautiful.
Saville works from photographs, textbook illustrations, forensic science books and other sources that include watching surgical procedures. She studies how the body is composed in order to paint it more accurately. In later work, Saville focuses on issues and imagery of trauma, violence, disease and death like in Knead and Reverse where the body has endured an act of trauma and Torso 2 where a carcass is seen as an example of violence that has ended in death. She paints the flesh as it has been mutilated, bloodied and bruised. The images are very intimate depicting the body in a state of vulnerability. The graphic depiction and large scale nature of the work adds to the images being aggressive and disturbing by being so large and unavoidable.
Saville also explores the body being in a state of in between-ness. In between gender like in Passage where the subject is a Transvestite and where gender is not fixed but negotiable and fluid. Also, in the Knead and Reverse the body is in a state of being in between life and death.
There is a parallel between Saville’s choice of imagery of bodies that have been altered or manipulated and the way in which she manipulates the paint to create the physicality of the body and flesh. Saville is able to use paint to create a sensory quality to her work, as well as, uses the images to explore larger themes and ideas.


Plan

Strategy


Knead


Reverse


Passage


Host



Torso

Kiefer Painted Big

Anselm Kiefer was born on March 8, 1945, in Donaueschingen, Germany, during the final days of the collapse of the Third Reich. Being a boy growing up in postwar Germany, he would then use these feelings and influences of the German burden of the Nazi legacy in his work. As a young man, he studied French and law, but then persued art as an academic study in Freiburg in the late 1960’s. He is well-known for a favorite technique of pouring a blob of melted lead onto an ashen canvas to heighten suggestions of incineration, and in making works in attempt to process the past, he has been liked to the movement called New Symbolism.
One of Kiefer’s most controversial of works is a series called Occupations, in which he portrayed himself dressed in a military uniform giving the Nazi salute. It was unsure whether Kiefer was alluding to the past with nostalgia or satirizing dreams for the Nazi empire. Kiefer says, “I do not identify with Nero or Hitler, but I have to reenact what they did just a little bit in order to understand the madness. That is why I make these attempts to become a fascist.” Occupations signaled Kiefer’s endeavor to use his vocation as an artist to explore his own identity and heritage, which is prevalent in most of his works.



Winter Landscape, 1970
Watercolor on paper, 16 15/16 x 14 3/16"

Heroic Symbols, 1969
Watercolor and gouache on paper, 6 1/2 x 6 3/8"


Heroic Symbols, 1969
Watercolor and gouache on paper, 22 x 16 1/2"

Kiefer’s early watercolors were an exploration of his identity, and a representation of his own human suffering and loneliness. Heroic Symbols consists of a self-portrait of Keifer giving the Nazi salute pasted on the same sheet as an image of the sky “wounded by shots.” Winter Landscape depicts a human head over a winter scene stained in blood. It was meant to represent the land stained by events in human history, perhaps also portraying Keifer’s painful personal guilt.

Father, Son, Holy Ghost, 1973
Oil and Charcoal on burlap, 114 x 74 3/4"
Ressurexit, 1973
Oil, acrylic, and charcoal on burlap, 114 3/16 x 70 7/8"
In 1972 and 1973, Keifer then started moving away from forest themes to taking up the physical surrounding of his studio as a motif. In Father, Son, Holy Ghost, He uses the structure of the attic or schoolhouse. The burning chairs are meant to represent the holy trinity. The spaces depicted in works such as are very psychologically charged and are a metaphor for the artist’s mind, where “conflict and contradiction are resolved through creation.”
Kiefer studied with Joseph Beuys in the 1970’s, and from him he learned the art of transforming materials such as straw, clay, lead, and shellac. Beuys also influenced Kiefer’s desire to create a dialogue with history and to employ myths, metaphors, and symbols as a means to engage and understand.
Your Golden Hair, Margarete, 1981
Oil, Emulsion, and Straw on Canvas, 51 3/16 x 67"

Margarete, 1981

Oil and Straw on Canvas, 110 x 149 5/8"

Shulamite, 1983
Oil, acrylic, emulsion, shellac, straw on canvas with woodcut, 114 3/16 x 145 11/16


Interior, 1981
Oil, acrylic, emulsion, straw, and shellac on canvas with woodcut, 113 x 122 7/16"

Kiefer also was very much influenced by Paul Celan’s writing, in terms of displaying German history and the horrors of the Holocaust. Celan’s “Death Fuge,” written in a Concentration Camp, was an influence for Kiefer’s work in the 1980’s, such as Margaret, Your Golden Hair, Margaret, and Shulamite. He would also write the titles large across the canvases in paintings such as these. The poem talks about the contrast between the blonde hair of the Aryan Margarete, and the dark ashen hair of the Jewish Shulamite. In Your Golden Hair, Margarete, straw is used to symbolize the German love of the land, but also to show the Nazi blonde ideal as grotesque. These natural elements also show fragility, which is in contrast to the stark subject matter. Shulamite shows a hellish environment of a Nazi memorial hall, the environment that consumed the girl Shulamite. Kiefer uses fire, both literally with the use of ashes, and representationally, in many of his works, as a theme as a destructive and redemptive force. In Interior, Kiefer painted the Mosaic room in Hitler’s Chancellery which has been charred with smoke, representing a direct descendant of the burned landscapes depicted in works such as Your Golden Hair, Margarete.
Kiefer has been compared to Jackson Pollock, in that his mature works were painted in an expressive style on a large scale. Margarete has been compared to Pollock’s Blue Poles (1952) in terms of composition.


Jerusalem, 1986
Canvas (in two parts) with steel and lead, 150 x 220 1/2"

Kiefer was interested in alchemy, or the attempting to change base materials such as lead into gold. Kiefer believed that the artist was an alchemist, with the ability to use raw materials such as paint and canvas to create profound and monumental works. After a visit to Israel, he painted Jerusalem, which can be seen as a metaphor for the city itself in that physically the painting has gone through many stages of life. Kiefer explained that he first created a “landscape painting” then covered areas with hot lead and more paint. He then peeled of much of the lead several months later, taking away color and leaving patches. The effect is of “skin that has been violently torn away in a fetishistic or even maniacal activity.” Iron skis come from the canvas symbolizing the “New World,” with gold leaf depicting the cosmos.
Jerusalem, with its use of gold leaf and allusion to the celestial and mythic, showed that by the mid-1980’s, he moved away from specifically German subject matter to more universal themes, such as the mythological.

To the Unknown Painter, 1983

Oil, emulsion, woodcut, shellac, latex, and straw on canvas


"A complex critical engagement with history runs through Anselm Kiefer's work. His paintings as well as the sculptures of Georg Baselitz created an uproar at the 1980 Venice Biennale: the viewers had to decide whether the apparent Nazi motifs were meant ironically or whether the works were meant to convey actual fascist ideas. Kiefer worked with the conviction that art could heal a traumatized nation and a vexed, divided world. He created epic paintings on giant canvases that called up the history of German culture with the help of depictions of figures such as Richard Wagner or Goethe, thus continuing the historical tradition of painting as a medium of addressing the world. Only a few contemporary artists have such a pronounced sense of art's duty to engage the past and the ethical questions of the present, and are in the position to express the possibility of the absolution of guilt through human effort."

Zim Zum, 1990

Acrylic, oil emulsion, shellac, ashes, and canvas on lead

Thursday, November 15, 2007

Rosenquist Painted Big

Rosenquist was considered an abstract painter, but not in the sense that we’ve been studying thus far. Early in his career, abstraction emerged as a sense of detachment, specifically the detachment that occurs in forgetting. Examples of his identity obscuring can be seen in Marilyn Monroe I and President Elect. Rosenquist believed that this process made his work both nonobjective and abstract, even though we was using imagery that was directly representational.

Rosenquist was born in 1933 in the Midwest, and grew up there most of his life. When he was a teenager, he was awarded a scholarship to study art at the Minneapolis School of Art at the Minneapolis Art Institute. From there he went on to the University of Minnesota, and received another scholarship to the Art Students League in New York.

Rosenquist soon became bored with his classes, since he already had the technical capabilities. He began work painting billboards for the next three years in Times Square and other areas of the city. This heavily influenced his work. Rosenquist had always believed he had an All-American background growing up, and this exposure to pop culture and the American economy runs through his body of work. It also allowed him to be comfortable working on such a large scale, generating some paintings that are over 86 feet long. (See F-111).

Rosenquist’s paintings have been seen as social and political commentaries. The President Elect was painted when John Kennedy was running against Eisenhower—Rosenquist wanted to ask what Kennedy was offering the American public, juxtaposing his next to “middle class” imagery. F-111 is often seen as an anti-war painting. Joan Collins Says is inspired by a personal encounter between the artist and the actress—she had promised a group of artist’s a show sponsored by Pepsi, and never followed through on it.

During the late sixties and early seventies, Rosenquist began creating full room installations deemed by some critics as “wrap around paintings”. He wanted to emphasize the mass of pop cultural images and advertisements we are bombarded with everyday. He also has an interest in sculptures, which he occasionally incorporates into his paintings, and is said to be a skilled printmaker as well.

In the 1980’s, Rosenquist transitioned into “crosshatched” paintings, which he saw as a more “collision-like” juxtaposition of images that his previous work. Partially inspired by Duchamp and Fontana, who literally slashed their canvases, Rosenquist believed that this effect would similarly give the illusion of a three dimensional space.

James Rosenquist’s career began in the age of abstraction and transitioned into the pop art movement. Even today, Rosenquist continues to create large scale paintings with cultural references in both advertising and the art world.











Tuesday, November 13, 2007

Salle Painted Big

Old Bottles, 1995
Oil and Acrylic on Canvas, 96 x 128"

Picture Builder, 1993
Oil and Acrylic on Canvas, 84 x 114"

Angels in the Rain, 1998
Oil and Acrylic on Canvas, 96 x 132"

Angel, 2001
Oil and Acrylic on Canvas and Linen, 72 x 96"


Full Swing, 2006-7
Oil on Linen, 85 x 64"


Friday, November 2, 2007

Bleckner Painted Big

Ross Bleckner was born in New York on May 12th, 1949 and grew up on Long Island. He is the middle child and has two sisters. He began painting at the age of 18, because, “[He] was very introspective. It was a sadness that made [him] withdraw into [himself] which has never left” (Richards). Bleckner Earned his B.A. from NYU in 1971 and his M.F.A. from California Institute of the Arts in 1973. In 1975, he was included in the Whitney Biennial.



Bleckner has been described as nervous, overwhelmed by self-doubt and insomniac. He is Jewish, gay, and an activist for AIDS organizations. Since about 1985 many of his paintings have addressed the subject of AIDS- both documenting it as a historical phenomenon and commemorating specific individuals who have died.
His philanthropic efforts have enabled many community organizations to perform their vital work. Currently, Bleckner is president of Community Research Initiative on AIDS, a non-profit community-based AIDS research and treatment education center. Ross Bleckner currently lives in New York City.

Brothers' Sword, 1986, oil on canvas, 108 x 84 in.

Bleckner’s painting style is classified as Neo-Conceptualism. The idea fuels the process of production, but the resulting physical object is viewed more as documentation of the idea. By this definition, the purpose of the artwork is to engage the viewers' mind rather than their eye. Ross Bleckner's paintings blend abstraction with recognizable symbols to create mediation on perception, transcendence and loss.

Bleckner using traditional oil-painting techniques manipulates the paints by using light over dark glazes to create transparencies, resulting in a three-dimensional viewing experience. This technique enhances his fixation with light by creating a dense and rich ground on which floating ambiguous forms suggest movement toward the identifiable. However, Bleckner has done some series in watercolor as well.

Memory of Larry, 1984, oil on canvas, 48 x 40 in.

Ross Bleckner's large-format pictures utilize both graphic designs and representational images such as flowers, birds, cells, drops of water, oceans and chandeliers. These are represented in front of an abstract background and he often uses flickering light to create challenging visual experiences. Bleckner gets inspiration from everything he looks at and a lot of his own work as well as his mistakes (Sussler).

Throbbing Hearts, 1994, oil, powdered pigment, wax on canvas, 96 x 120 in.

For Bleckner the canvas is "a place where countless different meanings cross and enter into relationship with one another." (Sussler)

Tolerance, 1998, oil on linen, 120 x 108 in.

Overexpression, 1998, oil on linen, 84 x 72 in.

Bird Installation, 1995 - 2003, oil on linen, variable sizes