Saturday, 23 April 2011

Sigmar Polke - Part 1

Sigmar Polke (1941 – 2010) was born in Oels, Silesia. In 1953 he moved from Thuringia to Düsseldorf where he began an apprenticeship as a glass-painter in 1959. Between 1961-1967 he studied at the Düsseldorf Art Academy
Over the past 40 years Polke created complex works that have helped define the art of the time. In the 1960s he created a new and unique vision of German art, which during the postwar years had been largely derivative of gestural abstraction. During this time Polke began making his ‘dot’ paintings, manually executed parodies of the Benday dot screens used by Roy Lichtenstein and Andy Warhol.

1968 Don Quixote
 Although he shared visual ideas with American Pop artists, he was less concerned with appropriating the pictorial style of advertising than in depicting the desired objects of a consumer society. While at the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf in 1963, Polke and fellow students Konrad Lueg and Gerhard Richter consolidated their ideas of cultural criticism into a style they termed Capitalist Realism. The humorous and deliberately “unskilled” qualities of Polke’s earliest works formalized a critique of both Socialist Realism and Pop art.

1965 Liebespaar II
During the 1970s, Polke slowed his art production in favour of travel to Afghanistan, Brazil, France, Pakistan, and the U.S., where he shot photographs and film footage that he would incorporate in his subsequent works during the 1980s. Using materials such as sheer synthetic fabrics, coloured lacquers, and hydrosensitive chemicals in combination with paint, he began to self-consciously undermine the conventions of painting and to challenge its appropriateness as a medium to comment on contemporary life.

Kathreiners Morgenlatte
Kathreiners Morgenlatte, with its layered composition incorporating fabric and painted imagery, is an example of this questioning. An image of a dull, domestic interior is superimposed over patterned swatches and clippings culled from the mass media, creating a formal metaphor for the complex layering of ideas found in postmodernism. To underscore his “destruction” of the traditional easel painting, Polke has apparently taken the wooden stretcher, cut it up and strewn the pieces over the surface of the work. Inverting his own name but signing ‘Henri Matisse’ right side up, Polke ironically comments on the presumed necessity of including an accepted sign of high modernism in order to guarantee the authenticity and value of an artwork. By reconciling a complex group of references in Kathreiners Morgenlatte, Polke presents a critique of the condition of the artist and the impossibility of a sustained originality in contemporary art in the late 20th century.

The anarchistic element of the work Polke developed was largely engendered by his mercurial approach. His irreverence for traditional painting techniques and materials and his lack of allegiance to any one mode of representation has established his now-respected reputation as a visual revolutionary.

1981-93 Paganini
Paganini, an expression of "the difficulty of purging the demons of Nazism" - witness the "hidden" swastikas - is typical of Polke's tendency to accumulate a range of different mediums within one canvas. It is not unusual for Polke to combine household materials and paint, lacquers, pigments, screen print and transparent sheeting in one piece. A complicated "narrative" is often implicit in the multi-layered picture, giving the effect of witnessing the projection of a hallucination or dream through a series of veils.
Sigmar Polke died in 2010 in Cologne.

1964 Two Palm Trees

1965-66 Freundinnen

1966 Woman at the Mirror

1968 Heron Painting II

1971-73 Zwei Kopfe

1973 Original and Fälschung

1976 Kandinsdingsda (Wir Kleinbürger)

1982 Hannibal with his Armoured Elephants

1982 Magnetic Landscape

1982 This is how you Sit Correctly (After Goya)

1983 Lingua Tertii Imperii

1986 Audacia

1987 B-mode

1988 Nude

1989 Untitled

Friday, 15 April 2011

Bridget Riley - Op Art part 2

This is the second part of a post on Bridget Riley, and shows examples of her colour work, which began in 1967. 
For background and biographical information on Riley see Part 1.

1967-8 Late Morning 
pva emulsion

1970 Circles 
Colour Structure Studies

1970 Circles 
Colour Structure Studies

1970 Circles 
Colour Structure Studies

1970 Circles 
Colour Structure Studies

1970 Orient 4 
acrylic

1972-3 Cantus Firmus 
acylic

1973 Paean 
acrylic

1978 Aurulum

1981 Achæan 
oil

1981 Light Between 
screenprint

1981 Shade 
oil

1981-2 Big Blue 
oil

1984 Blue Return 
oil

1987 Ease
1999 Fete 
screenprint

1999 Going Along 
oil

2000 Echo 
screenprint

2000 Start 
screenprint

Wednesday, 13 April 2011

Bridget Riley - Op Art part 1

Bridget Riley is one of Britain’s best-known artists whose career has spanned over 50 years. She first came to notice in the early 1960s with monochrome paintings that explored the dynamics of optical effects.

“In my earlier paintings, I wanted the space between the picture plane and the spectator to be active. It was in that space, paradoxically, the painting 'took place…then, little by little, and, to some extent deliberately, I made it go the other way, opening up an interior space, as it were, so that there was a layered, shallow depth. It is important that the painting can be inhabited, so that the mind's eye, or the eye's mind, can move about it credibly."

In 1967 Riley began experimenting with colour, and since then her paintings have examined the perception of nature by means of colour and form.

“The eye can travel over the surface in a way parallel to the way it moves over nature. It should feel caressed and soothed, experience frictions and ruptures, glide and drift…one moment there will be nothing to look at and the next second the canvas seems to refill, to be crowded with visual events.”

Riley was born in London in 1931 and was brought up in Cornwall. She studied at Goldsmiths College between 1949 – 1952 and the Royal College of Art between 1952 – 1955. In 1969 she was the first woman to win the International Prize for Painting whilst representing Britain at the 34th Venice Biennale.

She holds honorary doctorates from Oxford University, 1994, and Cambridge University, 1995. She was made a CBE in 1974 and in 1999 was awarded the Companion of Honour. In 2009 she was awarded the Kaiser Ring of the City of Goslar, Germany, one of the world’s most prestigious art prizes. Major exhibitions have included the Hayward Gallery, 1970 and 1992/94; a British Council touring retrospective in the USA, Australia and Japan, 1979; and retrospective exhibitions at Tate Britain, 2003; Museum of Modern Art in Sydney, Australia, 2005; City Gallery Wellington, New Zealand, 2005; and Musee d’Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris, 2008. She lives and works in London, Cornwall and France.

Part 1 is showing a selection of Riley's work from between 1961 and 1967.


1961 Kiss 
acrylic

1962 Blaze I 
emulsion

1963 Fall 
emulsion

1964 Hesitate 
oil

1964 Intake 
acrylic

1964 Loss 
oil

1964 White Disks 
emulsion

1965 Arrest III 
acrylic

1965 Arrest I 
emulsion

1965 Descending 
emulsion

1965 Fragment 2/10 
screenprint on perspex

1966 Breathe 
emulsion

1966 Static 2 
emulsion 

1966 Untitled, Diagonal Curve 
emulsion

1967 Cataract 3 
pva emulsion

1967 Deny II 
pva emulsion