CAMBRIDGE, MASS.- The MIT List Visual Arts Center presents Alan Uglow: Standards and Portraits an exhibition of the work of Alan Uglow (1941-2011). The exhibition is comprised of two of Uglows most important series, his Standard(s) paintings and Portrait(s) of a Standard, both centered on his decades-long investigation into the medium of painting.
Uglows work is marked by a keen sense of proportion, structure, form, and surface. Working in series that evolved gradually over decades, Uglow maintained an abiding focus on formal economy, using simple geometrical shapes to structure the surface of his canvases and emphasizing the materiality of painting rather than direct pictorial content. Perhaps his two best-known series, Standards and Portraits of a Standard reflect the artists commitment to exploring the formal and affective conditions of abstract painting.
Although seemingly reductive in form, Uglows Standards, each measuring seven by six feet, are executed with up to forty layers of paint. This slow and determined process creates delicate nuances of surface, the paintings subtly playing with light, reflection, and the viewers own presence in space. These perceptual distinctions, revealed by the meticulously textured, warmer or cooler surface of each canvas, make use of both precision and simplicity to produce a sense of pictorial space without traditional perspective or illusion. Uglows paintings also confront the problem of the edge, a motif running throughout the history of 20th century abstraction, by making the supportthe literal frame of the paintingtheir organizing element. Installed on blocks and sited in precise relation to the wall and surrounding space, the Standards assert the physicality of the mediuma painting as both an object and an imageeven as their surfaces draw the viewer in with their refinement of shape, texture, and ground.
Uglows Portraits of a Standard, photographic silkscreened prints on canvas, capture his Standard paintings at an oblique angle, making them recede into physical space. Furthering Uglows interest in repetition, difference, and objecthood, the Portraits are of identical dimension as the paintings and similarly displayed on blocks. While the structural elements of color and edge are blurred through the mechanical process of printing, the Portraits also suggest another edge, that between painting, photography, and sculpture.
Alan Uglow was born in Luton, England in 1941 and died in New York in 2011. He earned a degree in painting and printmaking from the Central School of Art in London in 1962. After finishing his studies Uglow moved to New York in 1969, motivated by the energy of New York and his feeling that abstract art was less appreciated in Britain than in the United States. Uglow was a fixture in the New York City art community until his death. He participated in his first group show at Bykert Gallery in 1974 and in 1978 he made his solo debut in simultaneous shows at the galleries of Mary Boone (paintings) and Susan Caldwell (drawings).
Work by Alan Uglow has been featured in a number of solo and group exhibitions worldwide. A solo show of Uglows work, curated by Bob Nickas, is on view at David Zwirner, New York through March 23, 2013. Uglows work was also shown in a 2012 group summer show, Standard Operating Procedures at Blum & Poe, Los Angeles, organized by Piper Marshall. He was also exhibited in 2012 in the group show Stand still like the hummingbird at David Zwirner. In 2010, his work was the subject of two large exhibitions concurrently on view in Germany at the Museum Wiesbaden and the Museum Haus Esters in Krefeld. Other recent solo exhibitions include the CCNOA Center for Contemporary Non-Objective Art, Brussels (2006) and the Gemeentemuseum, The Hague (2004). His first museum solo exhibition was held in 1992 at the Kölnischer Kunstverein in Cologne.
Uglows work is represented in private and public collections internationally, including the Cincinnati Art Museum; Gemeentemuseum, The Hague; High Museum, Atlanta; Le Consortium, Dijon, France; Musée des Beaux-Arts, La Chaux-de-Fonds, Switzerland; Museum Haus Esters, Krefeld, Germany; Museum Wiesbaden, Germany; National Gallery of Iceland, Reykjavik; Sammlung Goetz, Munich; Sammlung Lafrenz, Hamburg; Staatliche Museen zu Berlin; and the Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam.