Dear Painter, Paint Me
shows
how todays realistic painting presents itself: provocative,
critical, ironic, and emotive. Since the early 20th century, the advocates
of an abstract, conceptual modernity have contested the validity of
realistic modes of representation as politically and aesthetically
reactionary. Yet, there have always been artists defying this maxim.
The exhibition opens with the erotically charged nudes Francis Picabia
painted after pictures in magazines in the 1940s. Dear Painter,
Paint Me
presents 17 international artists who, working
in his wake, have ventured to explore the figurative from
a mostly conceptual, media-filtered point of view.
The loose genealogy
of post-war realistic painting spans from Bernard Buffet, Alex Katz,
Sigmar Polke, and Martin Kippenberger to the present New York scene
and artists like John Currin, Elizabeth Peyton, and Kurt Kauper, as
well as works by such artists as Luc Tuymans and Neo Rauch. The exhibition
has been organized in collaboration between the SCHIRN KUNSTHALLE
FRANKFURT, the Centre Pompidou, Paris, and the Kunsthalle Wien, Vienna.

Kurt Kauper
Cary Grant #1, 2001
Öl auf Birkenholz / Oil on birch panel,
228,6 x 142,2 cm
Sammlung Dean Valentine and Amy Adelston, Los Angeles
(please click, to enlarge the picture)
The exhibition Dear Painter, Paint Me
borrows its title from Martin Kippenbergers polemic
1981 series for which the artist commissioned a professional poster
painter for one year to translate photographs selected by him into
large-format pictures. This subtle play with the role of the painter
illustrates how ambiguous, deceptive, and pliable pictures have become
in todays mass media world. Kippenbergers skeptical radical
view of the concept of authenticity in realistic painting outlines
an attitude which the artists of this exhibition share.

Kurt Kauper
Diva Fiction #11, 1999
Öl auf Birkenholz / Oil on birch panel, 215,9 x 121,9 cm
Courtesy The Dakis Joannou Collection, Athens
please click, to enlarge the picture
Highlighting 18 artistic positions from 1940
until today, Dear Painter, Paint Me
fathoms the
role and range of figurative painting. The exhibition begins with
the heydays of doubting realistic modes of representation, the early
years of European fascism. Intense correspondences between the members
of the Frankfurt School driven into exile in the mid-thirties initiated
a debate which established an opposition between the possibilities
of a critical realism and the project of modernity. It was in those
days that Francis Picabia, undoubtedly a protagonist of the avant-garde,
began to paint colorful realistic pictures with a kitschy tenor, using
erotic magazines such as Mon Paris and Paris Sex
Appeal as his source. Picabias bent for an apparently
anti-modernist figurative art of portrayal in the academic style was
considered an affront.

John Currin
The Moroccan, 2001
Öl auf Leinwand / Oil on canvas, 66 x 55,8 cm
Centre Pompidou, Musée national d'art moderne, Paris
With these pictures as a starting-point, the
exhibition continues with a loose sequence of four other historical
positions, each of which marks a radical attitude of the post-war
era. All of them go to prove that a leaning towards figurative painting
does not necessarily imply a retreat to traditional forms of realistic
depiction.
The second part of the presentation following
Picabias Nudes (1940-3) spans from a group of austere
nudes, portraits, and self-portraits by Bernard Buffet (1949-65) which,
aimed against the academism of the Ecole de Paris, center on academic
subjects, and four crucial pictures by Sigmar Polke (from the early
60s) for the capitalist realism that parody the alienation
effect of the consumer culture to a selection of large-format group
portraits by Alex Katz (from the 70s), pictures revealing the filter
of the distanced view of sociological cinema, and a presentation of
works by Martin Kippenberger (from the 80s) that illustrate the artists
refusal to see himself categorized as belonging to a specific artistic
or political group.

Glenn Brown
Joseph Beuys (after Rembrandt), 2001
Oil on board, 96 x 79,5 cm
Collection Bobbi & Walter, Zifkin, Los Angeles
These historical positions lead to thirteen
other artists works from the past decades scene. Their
views are characterized by a digestion of the historical positions
formal and conceptual strategies. All of them radically abandon the
traditional art of portrayal by making pictures of the human subject
the starting-point of their approach. The artists almost never depart
from the real subject as their model but rather rely on photographs,
films, TV pictures, the press, and the canon of art history or base
their constructions on fictitious figures of the prevailing visual
and social codes. The artists assembled in the show are far from believing
in the often proclaimed impending death of figurative painting but
consider the figurative as a source of freedom in view of the dogmas
of history. Dear Painter, Paint Me
demonstrates
that figurative painting is not only full of vitality but may also
convey conceptual contents and be a source of visual pleasure at the
same time.
LIST OF PRESENTED ARTISTS: Kai Althoff, Carole
Benzaken, Glenn Brown, Bernhard Buffet, Brian Calvin, John Currin,
Peter Doig, Sophie von Hellermann, Alex Katz, Kurt Kauper, Martin
Kippenberger, Enoc Perez, Bruno Perrament, Elizabeth Peyton, Francis
Picabia, Sigmar Polke, Neo Rauch, Luc Tuymans.
CATALOGUE: Dear Painter, Paint Me ....
Edited by Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris; Kunsthalle Wien, Vienna;
Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt, Frankfurt am Main. With essays by Alison
M. Gingeras, Sabine Folie, Blaenka Perica, Michael Glasmeier.
Contributions on the artists by Carole Boulbès, Alexander Roob,
Rainer Speck, Massimiliano Gioni, Parisa Kind, Alison M. Gingeras,
Sabine Folie, Gabriele Mackert, Jemima Montagu, Blaenka Perica,
and Martina Weinhart. English, German, and French editions, 200 pages,
ca. 100 color illustrations, ISBN 2-84426-138-8 (English), ISBN 3-85247-037-4
(German), ISBN 2-84426-124-8 (French), 20 €.
VENUE:
SCHIRN KUNSTHALLE FRANKFURT, Römerberg, D-60311 Frankfurt. EXHIBITION
DATES: 15 January - 6 April 2003. !!! NEW OPENING HOURS: Tue, Fri-Sun
10 am-7 pm, Wed and Thur 10 am-10 pm !!! INFORMATION: www.SCHIRN.de,
e-mail: welcome@schirn.de, phone: (+49-69) 29 98 82-0, fax: (+49-69)
29 98 82-240. ADMISSION: 6 €, reduced 4 €; GUIDED TOURS:
Wed 7.00 pm, Sat and Sun 5.00 pm. CURATORS: Alison M. Gingeras, Sabine
Folie, Blaenka Perica. MAIN SPONSOR: koda Auto Deutschland
GmbH. ADDITIONAL SUPPORT BY: Verein der Freunde der Schirn Kunsthalle
e. V.
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