NEW YORK, NY.- Lévy Gorvy will debut new paintings and sculpture by Dan Colen in the artists inaugural exhibition at the gallery, opening May 2nd. Dan Colen: Mailo rder Mother Purgatory will present three recent bodies of works that focus on technical innovation in pursuit of ambience and emotional depth. The exhibition, which will run through June 23rd at the gallerys New York flagship, is both a celebration of Colens recently announced representation by the gallery and an evolution of his painterly practice.
A leading figure of his generation, Colen pursues an art deeply rooted in the history of painting. Having engaged in long periods of material experimentation, employing substances from chewing gum, flowers, dirt, and grass, to confetti, and tar and feathers, he has gradually deconstructed the essence of paintings brushstroke and the gestural mark of the artists hand. His bold, spirited, and fertile style of tromp loeil techniques and tongue-in-cheek humor deliver a decidedly contemporary interpretation to the recognized canon. However, it is also through this lens that Colen so fervently mines and questions established historical styles: Abstract Expressionism, Minimalism, Conceptualism. Challenging the heritage of his medium through an innovative approach to materiality, technique, and content, Colen pushes the boundaries of painting while imbuing his work with formal rigor and art historical richness.
The exhibition will be accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue that features a conversation between the artist and Jeff Koons moderated by curator Douglas Fogle as well as an essay by art historian and critic Andrianna Campbell, a noted specialist in American art of the modern and contemporary period.
Dan Colen: Mailo rder Mother Purgatory spans three floors of Lévy Gorvys gallery in New York.
The exhibition opens on the ground floor with new paintings from Colens Mailorder series (20152018) of lush silkscreen prints, which depict images of clothing from mail-order catalogues, enlarged to a monumental scale. Here the artist harnesses the power of seduction and subversive marketing to consider relationships between fundamentals of art: commodity, originality, and artistic production. Suggestive of a new direction in Colens approach to surface, ideas of layering, transference, and accumulation coalesce and converge in the complex process of printing and making these works. Colen creates tension between presence and absence, deriving this dichotomy not only from his choice of disembodied subjects, but also through form. He deliberately interrogates his tools considering how to use canvas and how to apply paintand then examines the relationship between the physicality of the canvass weave and the graphic qualities of the printed dot. By appropriating advertisements that are quite literally are clipped from his everyday life, Colen transforms cheap commercial prints into velvety, saturated silkscreens through which blurred forms and tonal subtleties are elevated to technical studies of color, line, shadow, and light. Informed by the artists love of Mark Rothkos color fields and the painterly techniques of predecessors such as Barnett Newman, Brice Marden, Agnes Martin, and Georgia OKeefe, Colens Mailorder paintings emerge from a laborious process of application and control. Between the softness of colorful sweaters and the hard edges of corduroy jeans, illusionistic fields of pigments emerge between the creases and the folds to reveal a sublime rendering of our contemporary urban landscape and its alluring, magnetic pull.
While Colens Mailorders may bridge a juncture between recent series in his art, his Mother and Purgatory paintings are entrenched in the artists ever evolving commitment to his paintings fundamental origins. Employing oil on canvas, Colen wrestles with materiality and process in these two bodies of work, propelling his practice ever forward to unveil visceral pictorial experiences that are innovative and fresh.
On the gallerys second and third floors, new Mother and Purgatory paintings further extend Colens longstanding interest in the sentimental tenderness of mid-20th century hand-drawn animation. Here, three new large-scale oil paintings from the series Mother (20172018) are presented in conjunction with a painted steel sculpture of a female nude. Mindful of popular cultures force to express the fleeting and ephemeral moments of human existence, Colen draws upon animated stills from Disney classics to expose the fragility and wrought psychological terrain of our collective imagination. The narrative of the Disney film Bambi (1942) arouses the emotions reverberating throughout Colens present body of work: sentiments of abandonment, emptiness, searching, and loss transcend the artists cool palette of blues and barren branches that sway hauntingly in the air. Here, the mother figure is personified in landscape: creating tension between the foreground and background of the picture plane, our experience of the looming sky and shivering charcoal bark of autumns forlorn trees is both startling and harsh. Emblematic of the temporal and transient themes of life and birth, these works elicit the weight of the mournful fawns experience of life, love, and death.
Paired in dialogue with the Mother paintings, a new sculpture (20172018), portrays the physical representation of a woman. Arrayed in the center of the gallery floor, her arms reach skyward, similarly evoking the figuration of Colens dead trees. Lying upon her back, her body twists in the pose figura serpentinata (a stance termed in Italian painting and sculpture to elicit dynamism in the figure) spiraled on its central axis, her lower limbs push in one direction while her torso spins the opposite way. Between her hands she holds a woodland creature: gripping the neck of a rabbit, its feet rest upon her chest. Painted in the technique of chiaroscuro, her intense but tender gaze is inspired by historical depictions, drawing influence from Caravaggio, Gustave Courbets Woman with a Parrot (1866), and the iconography of medieval Madonna and Child.
On the third floor, Colens investigation of painterly gestures and his ongoing navigation between abstraction and representation culminate in the Purgatory paintings. Four new canvases in vivid magenta hues display the artists love of surface and pure pleasure in layering colors. Mining classic styles of American animation and fusing them with the atmospheric effects of J.M.W. Turner and John Constables studies of clouds, Colens cloudscapes, rendered with a surreal palette, artificial depth, and cartoonish sense of form, achieve resounding contemporaneity while conjuring historical references that range from 19th century Romanticism and the Hudson River School to the religiously loaded semiotic legacy of the cloud in Renaissance and Baroque painting. Colen builds up thin, translucent glazes in oil through a process that is slow and searching. Painstakingly crafted and layered, each canvas is sprayed, stained, or hand-painted over a period of months to create a smooth surface that both preserves a satisfying materiality and exhibits a depth of pigment that is at once ethereal, resonant, and full.
In his handling of paint Colen collapses the legibility of his subjects, denying conventions of pictorial space, and conflating the finite and the infinite, the phenomenal and the real. The visual density and aura of color that he creates is suspended on the canvas in a middle ground that is void of three-point-perspective, enigmatically evoking either the surge or dissolution of natures overwhelming force. Trapped in an irresolute reality outside of conventional space and time, the vaporescent forms of Colens Purgatory paintings suggest a connection to feelings hidden beneath his amorphous, seemingly abstract surfaces. Built up steadily through surface, the emotional reverence of Colens compositions is encapsulated in his diffusion of paint. To the greater discourse of painting, Colen offers new interpretations in the genre of landscape and the search for something spiritual and sublime in the mix of contemporary life.