WILLEM DE KOONING THE FIGURE: MOVEMENT AND GESTURE Paintings, Sculptures, and Drawings

Similar documents
Woman Sitting, Willem de Kooning, (oil & charcoal on board) [Course notes].

GAGOSIAN GALLERY. John Elderfield on Painted on 21st Street: Helen Frankenthaler from 1950 to John Elderfield, Sam Cornish

Art Radar: Beetween painting and sculpture: Zhu Jinshi at Inside-Out Art Museum, bytianmo Zhang, 15th January 2016

Richard Pousette-Dart: Beginnings. Biography

The Second Generation Abstract Expressionist, Ed Clark

IB VA COMPARATIVE STUDY

NUMBER OF TIMES COURSE MAY BE TAKEN FOR CREDIT: Four

Jack Whitten: Erasures

G A G O S I A N G A L L E R Y GO SEE NEW YORK: ROBERT RAUSCHENBERG AT GAGOSIAN GALLERY WEST 21ST STREET, OCTOBER 29 THROUGH DECEMBER 18, 2010

escape from the fetters of subject matter, and he began to work Cubist forms in an increasingly expressionist manner.

Images of the paintings and the installation follow the essay, courtesy Robert Bingaman.

Josh Smith CURRENTS FEB 14 - MAR 14, * Images * Press Release

Cows skulls lay all over the West. Georgia

Installation view, West Gallery. Courtesy of Angell Gallery

Advanced Placement Studio Art Summer Assignments 2016

A Finding Aid to the Wayne Thiebaud Papers, , in the Archives of American Art

IMPORTANT: DO NOT REVEAL TITLES UNTIL AFTER DISCUSSION!

CHINESE ABSTRACTION SHEN CHEN PAUL CHING-BOR LIANGHONG FENG. March 24 - May 5, MASS MoCA Way, North Adams, MA

Richard Diebenkorn 'The Green Huntsman,' x 69.5", oil on canvas, 1952

Mid-Twentieth Century Craft and Design

Tam Van Tran at Susanne Vielmetter Projects

Jackson Pollock

Paint like van Gogh!

Achievement Targets & Achievement Indicators. Envision, propose and decide on ideas for artmaking.

THE PACE GALLERY PRESS RELEASE

Isabel Bishop. Interlude (1952) Winner of the prestigious Walter Lippincott Prize for best figural work in oil at The Pennsylvania Academy in 1953.

Contemporary Art Masterpieces At Sotheby s

Mills College MFA Exhibition May 4-25, 2014

Janet Fish s Jarring Experiments in Still Life Painting by Peter Malone on January 28, 2016

Colby College Museum of Art. Teacher Guide Grades K-2

Walter Battiss African Rocks and Figures Oil on canvas (81,5 x 102 cm) SANG Acc 61/20 TECHNICAL REPORT

Educators Resource. Amy Sillman: Landline 28 September January 2019

Fall 2016-Spring 2017

Invented Geographies

POP ART EXHIBITION 2018

As seen in the July 2010 issue of

CHINESE ABSTRACTION SHEN CHEN PAUL CHING-BOR CUI FEI LIANGHONG FENG. March 24 - May 5, MASS MoCA Way, North Adams, MA

KINDERGARTEN VISUAL ARTS PACING GUIDE:

UNIT 1 (of 5): Line (16 hours = 1 credit)

Robert Breer was born in Detroit, America, in He studied Fine Art at Stanford University before moving to Paris in After starting his

SOL LEWITT. a d a m. e: 24 CORK STREET LONDON W1S 3NJ t:

Joanne Greenbaum s Amazing Parties

Office of Curriculum, Instruction & Professional Development VISUAL ARTS (562) FAX (562) VISUAL ARTS

Newest & Rising Group Show

Drawing Portfolio. Advanced Placement Studio Art. Drawing embodies a genuine and independent way of thinking. Phillip Rawson

Dear Educator: PISSARRO S PEOPLE EDUCATIONAL RESOURCES Legion of Honor Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco

Henri Matisse drawings on display at Mount Holyoke

Edgar Degas ( ) Impressionist

Achievement Targets & Achievement Indicators. Compile personally relevant information to generate ideas for artmaking.

Reclining, Alexander Archipenko, 1922, marble, 17 5/8 x 11 1/2 x 11 1/4 in. archipenko A Modern. Legacy. Traveling Exhibitions

Colby College Museum of Art. Teacher Guide Grades 9-12

Lilly Lulay delving into visual strata

A SPATIAL ILLUSION. Isometric Projection in the East

Galerie Nationale. Gulf Photo Plus

701 CCA Summer Workshop

METRO PICTURES. Robert Longo. Gang of Cosmos April 10 - May 23, 2014 Opening reception Thursday, April 28, 6-8 PM

Tel:

Grade 8 CURRICULUM MAP CONTENT: Art Revised: March A5 25A6 25A7 25B7 25B9 25B10 26A6 26A7 26A9 26B7 26B8 26B11 26B12 27B5 27B6 27B7

Feminist Publication of Art and Politics.

The Exquisite Dissonance Of Kehinde Wiley, npr, May 22, 2015.

Randall Sexton allows his paintings to go in any number of directions,

SAMARA ADAMSON PINCZEWSKI. The Beautiful Corner. Langford120, 120 Langford St, North Melbourne

Graphic Design: BFA Portfolio Review

Art Glossary Studio Art Course

Edward Weston is widely known for his classical approach to photography. He

RATTLEY III, JUIE, M.F.A. Visual Documents. (2007) Directed by Professor Mariam Stephan. 6 pp.

QUICK VIEW: DETAILED VIEW:

BASTIENNE SCHMIDT TYPOLOGY OF WOMEN

A CLOSER LOOK

East City Art Reviews: Always Into Now at the Torpedo Factory

Teaching Resource: Special Exhibition. Fine Lines: American Drawings from the Brooklyn Museum March 8 May 26, 2013

Graphic Design: BFA Portfolio Review

Art 2D Mid-Term Review 2018

Hara Documents 9 Masako Ando: The Garden of Belly Button

Art III. Fine Arts Curriculum Framework. Revised 2008

Bernard Childs [ ]

Alexander Calder s Style In uences Chinese Contemporary Artists

Scanners find secrets from Picasso s Blue Period

PREVIEWING UPCOMING EXHIBITIONS, EVENTS, SALES AND AUCTIONS OF HISTORIC FINE ART. ISSUE 26 Mar/Apr 2016

Q & A. Hilarie Lambert

TABLE OF CONTENTS. foreword. essays. works. artist bios. sally gil: excavating the present_by julie h. reiss

LINDY LEE. Adelaide Biennial of Australian Art: Divided Worlds INTERPRETIVE RESOURCE

Video, Sculpture, Installation

John Davis Gallery. William Ransom Sculpture

I Let The Piece Tell Me What To Do

MANCHESTER AND ORCHARD HEIGHTS ELEMENTARY TEXT FOR STUDENT DISPLAYS, 2012 FOCUS ON CONCEPTS AND STUDENT LEARNING TARGETS

VCA Visual Art Studio: Drawing Foundations

2011 Austin Independent School District Page 1 of 4 updated 5/15/11

Painting, Drawing & Sculpture (PDS)

Mark Rothko: The Works On Canvas By David Anfam

Third Grade Visual Arts Curriculum Overview

For Alzheimer s Patients, Art s Therapeutic Effects Are Transformative

INERTIA: STUDIO VISIT WITH NY BASED PAINTER LEIGH RUPLE AMY BOONE- MCCREESH MAY 4, 2017

Enduring Understandings 1. Design is not Art. They have many things in common but also differ in many ways.

A Finding Aid to the Robert Scull Papers, 1955-circa 1984, bulk dates , in the Archives of American Art

SAM FRIEDMAN. Territories Unexplored

Virginia Jaramillo. Point Omega. Dallas Art Fair. April 12-15, 2018

Studio Art Classes & Workshops Fall 2010

Central Valley School District (Middle School Fine Arts) Curriculum Map (Grade 8) Week 1

Grade 7 - Visual Arts Term 4. Life Drawing

Transcription:

PRESS RELEASE Press Contacts Jennifer Joy / Sarah Goulet / Lauren Staub jjoy / sgoulet / lstaub@thepacegallery.com 212.421.8987 WILLEM DE KOONING THE FIGURE: MOVEMENT AND GESTURE Paintings, Sculptures, and Drawings April 29 through July 29, 2011 Willem de Kooning, Amityville, 1971, oil on canvas, 80-1/3" x 69-1/2" 2011 The Willem de Kooning Foundation / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York NEW YORK, April 7, 2011 The Pace Gallery is honored to present Willem de Kooning: The Figure: Movement and Gesture, on view at 32 East 57 th Street from April 29 through July 29, 2011. This will be the first exhibition at Pace devoted to the artist since the gallery announced exclusive representation of the estate last fall. Willem de Kooning: The Figure: Movement and Gesture features nearly forty paintings, drawings, and sculptures from the late 60s through the late 70s, including a number of rarely seen paintings. A catalogue with an essay written by art historian Richard Shiff will accompany the exhibition. An opening reception will be held at the gallery on April 28 from 6 to 8 pm.

From the late 60s to the late 70s de Kooning explored the figure with new gestural liquidity, merging the figure into landscape and working in sculpture for the first time. The Figure: Movement and Gesture focuses on the movement of transformation from figuration into abstraction and the complex ways that de Kooning depicted motion as he rendered the human figure. The figure, de Kooning stated during this period, is nothing unless you twist it around like a strange miracle. The artist twisted, turned, and contorted the figure into the landscape as he investigated form, blurring the edges into abstraction and bringing it back into moments of clarity. This new consideration of the figure coincided with de Kooning s permanent move to the Hamptons from Manhattan in 1963 and a growing interest in a pastoral vocabulary. As de Kooning resumed painting in his new studio, the figures that emerged were decidedly different from his anatomically distorted, wild-eyed women from the 50s. In contrast to the dark lines of charcoal or black enamel that bound those earlier compositions, brushstroke and color were freed from form. As the artist experienced the motion of the figure and of his own strokes the distinction between figure and ground diminished until woman was no longer differentiated from landscape. In Woman, 1969, a rarely seen painting, on view here for the first time in New York, de Kooning pulls the twisting figure out from fields of color. Amityville, 1971, reveals glimpses of feet, hands, and perhaps a central torso, Shiff writes, But what do we actually see? The bright colors white, yellow, red, and blue, all distributed nearly equally throughout the field of this image create a sensory tension between the linear configurations and the chromatic contrasts. To concentrate on the one is to be distracted by the other, with the result that perceptual movement now this, now that is built into the painting. De Kooning s process of building a painting was entwined with the movement that it depicted; insistent on working each painting from all four sides, he rotated the paintings into different orientations a vertical composition becoming horizontal and vice-versa. As he turned the image of the figure around in his mind, considering it from every angle, it was touch, Shiff explains, that guided his contact with the pictorial surface. At times de Kooning drew with his eyes closed, with his left hand or both hands, drawing from the moving image on a television screen, feeling his own body into the position of the figures that he would paint internalizing the motion he wished to depict. The paintings mutated constantly, rarely considered finished, and a day s work was often scraped down to begin anew over the traces of pigment that preceded it. De Kooning worked on multiple paintings simultaneously, using vellum to invert, mirror, or replicate a movement and transfer the image from one work to another or to study a movement from both sides, working on both recto and verso of the page. Examples of the artist s works on vellum will also be on view, mounted so that they will be visible from both sides. Twenty drawings will provide a glimpse at the quickest, most direct expression of hand to paper. [My] drawings are fast, de Kooning once remarked, like snapshots.

Willem de Kooning, <no title>, c. 1980, ink on paper, 8-1/2 x 11-1/16", double-sided 2011 The Willem de Kooning Foundation / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York The time period presented coincides with de Kooning s first foray into sculpture in 1969, the result of a chance encounter on a visit to Rome with an old friend who owned a foundry. Working with clay enabled the artist to connect to the human body without the interruption of the brush, and he responded to the visceral act of pushing, squeezing, and shaping the form as he considered it in three dimensions. In 1971 he began sculpting again in his East Hampton studio, making works larger than those he had made abroad, often working with dexterous wire armatures that could accommodate the heavy masses of wet clay he applied. In 1972, de Kooning made several figures related to the paintings that immediately preceded his work with sculpture, such as Cross-legged Figure (1972), a bronze figure twisted around a central axis with its limbs flayed outwards. Hostess (1973), a bronze sculpture measuring 49" x 37" x 29," will also be on view. Willem de Kooning s relationship with Pace dates to the gallery s origins in 1963 and spans five decades, during which the gallery has presented more than a dozen exhibitions devoted to the artist. These include three groundbreaking shows that have greatly contributed to the scholarship on de Kooning, providing new revelations and insight into his richly nuanced career. De Kooning/Dubuffet: The Women (1991) was the first full-scale exhibition to pair both artists series of women, painted almost simultaneously on each side of the Atlantic; De Kooning/Dubuffet: The Late Works (1993) explored affinities in the final works of the artists, and Willem de Kooning and John Chamberlain: Influence and Transformation (2001) examined two Abstract Expressionists working across generations and mediums. At Pace, the de Kooning estate is reunited with contemporaries and friends from the artist s life, including the estates of Adolph Gottlieb, Isamu Noguchi, Ad Reinhardt, and Mark Rothko. For decades Pace artists ranging from Chuck Close and Jim Dine to Robert Irwin have noted de Kooning s influence and their own admiration for his work. Born on April 24, 1904 in Rotterdam, de Kooning would become recognized as a leader of the New York school by the 1950s. In 1948, Josef Albers invited de Kooning to teach at Black Mountain College, where Robert

Rauschenberg and John Chamberlain, among others, studied. Moving from figuration to abstraction and at times working simultaneously in both, de Kooning s work underwent radical stylistic shifts from decade to decade. This exhibition precedes a major retrospective devoted to the artist at The Museum of Modern Art, New York, which will examine the development of the artist s career over nearly seven decades through more than 200 works from public and private collections, representing nearly every type of technique and subject matter that the artist worked in. De Kooning: A Retrospective will be on view from September 18, 2011 through January 9, 2012. Willem de Kooning s work has been featured in hundreds of solo and group exhibitions internationally and can be found in nearly every important public collection around the world. For more information about Willem de Kooning: The Figure: Movement and Gesture, please contact the Public Relations department of The Pace Gallery at 212.421.8987. For general inquiries, please email info2@thepacegallery.com; for reproduction requests, email reprorequest@thepacegallery.com. Willem de Kooning, 1972, photograph by Hans Namuth/ Courtesy Center for Creative Photography, University of Arizona 1991 Hans Namuth Estate. Artwork: 2011 The Willem de Kooning Foundation / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York ###

Featured works: Willem de Kooning The Figure: Movement and Gesture The Pace Gallery, 32 East 57 th Street, New York City April 29 through July 29, 2011 Woman, c. 1969 oil on canvas 60" x 48" Hostess, 1973 bronze 49" x 37" x 29" Woman in a Garden, 1971 oil on paper on canvas 72-1/2" x 36" <no title>, c. 1970-74 oil on vellum on canvas, with masking tape 73-1/2" x 42-1/8" Amityville, 1971 oil on canvas 80-1/3" x 69-1/2" Untitled, 1970 oil on paper on canvas 71" x 36-3/4" All artwork: 2011 The Willem de Kooning Foundation / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York