Marlborough Contemporary Art!



R.B. Kitaj: The Exile at Home
R.B. Kitaj, Los Angeles No. 7 (Double), 2001, Oil on canvas
March 4 - April 8, 2017

Opening reception
Saturday, March 4, 2017
6-8pm
Marlborough Contemporary is pleased to present R.B. Kitaj: The Exile at Home curated, by Barry Schwabsky. R.B. Kitaj (1932-2007) was one of the most prominent painters of his time, particularly in England where the American artist spent some four decades spanning the late 1950s through the late 1990s. Part of an extraordinary cohort who emerged from the Royal College of Art circa 1960, which included Peter Blake, Patrick Caulfield, and David Hockney, Kitaj was immediately pegged as one of its leading figures. The London Times greeted his first solo show in 1963 as a long-awaited and galvanizing event: “Mr. R.B. Kitaj’s first exhibition, now that it has at last taken place, puts the whole ‘new wave’ of figurative painting in this country during the last two or three years into perspective.” In 1976, KItaj curated the exhibition The Human Clay, and in the essay he wrote for it he proposed the existence of a “School of London”—a label which stuck to a group of painters that includes Francis Bacon, Frank Auerbach, Lucian Freud, Leon Kossoff, Michael Andrews, and Kitaj himself. Kitaj “constructed in my head,” as he admitted, hoping that it might “become even more real,” a context in which his willfully contrarian art could make perfect sense. Later, his concept of “diasporism”—an art “enacted under peculiar historical and personal freedoms, stresses, dislocation, rupture and momentum” by one who “lives and paints in two or more societies at once”—gave more specific meaning to the sense of unease that had alwasy been a part of Kitaj’s work. 
Today, with a new wave of figurative painting responding to new “ freedoms, stresses, dislocation, rupture and momentum” in societies that are increasingly hybrid (and face increasingly violent responses to this hybridity), Kitaj’s art is more relevant than ever. 
This exhibition draws on works from all phases of the artist’s career—from an already impressively mature and challenging painting from the late 1950s to several pieces made in 2007, the year of Kitaj’s death—to show that his passionate engagement with literary and artistic traditions (Cézanne and Matisse, Kafka and Walter Benjamin) as well as his own personal quest to interpret and mythologize his identity and destiny. In his work there is a singular vision of a modernity in which displacement and difference are paramount—in which the only way to be at home is to imagine oneself in permanent exile. The exhibition is accompanied by a fully-illustrated catalogue with essays by Schwabsky and contemporary painter Keith Mayerson. 
Barry Schwabsky is art critic for The Nation and co-editor of international reviews for Artforum. His recent books are collections of essays: The Perpetual Guest: Art in the Unfinished Present, 2016, and Words for Art: Criticism, History, Theory, Practice, 2013 and of poetry Trembling Hand Equilibrium, 2015. 
* In conjunction with the exhibition, Marlborough Contemporary will host a panel discussion moderated by Barry Schwabsky. Panelists include artists Keith Mayerson, Sanya Kantarovsky, and Natalie Frank as well as R.B. Kitaj Studio Project Director Tracy Bartley. The discussion will directly precede the opening reception on Saturday, March 4 and will begin at 4pm
Greg Bogin: all together
Greg Bogin, all together (TBT - blue), 2017. acrylic and urethane on canvas 32 x 47 ó  in. | 81.28 x 120.65 cm
March 4 - April 8, 2017

Opening reception
Saturday, March 4, 2017
6-8pm
For his second solo exhibition with the gallery, Greg Bogin maintains a laser-focus on the duo-toned shaped canvas. Entitled all together, the group of paintings, in palette and form, evokes the nostalgic uplift of vintage children’s television and its attendant message of inclusiveness and a common good. 
Bogin’s career-spanning commitment to slight variations in color and form are often quite subtle. As such, the appearance here of dramatic cutaways and interior voids in the paintings feels like a rupture of real magnitude. These spaces enlist the wall itself as a component of the composition and draw our attention to the fact of the canvas pulled taught over graceful curves and layer upon layer of sprayed pigment and clearcoat. 
A majority of the work engages the traditional, landscape-format rectangle. In removing large areas of the surface, Bogin infiltrates painting’s established parameters and nods to the current erosion of societal structures. In this manner, the artist hints at a broader intention for the work. As the artist puts it, 
“I grew up during a time of great social change and turbulence. People of my parents’ generation wanted the world to change for the better, to be more just and more inclusive. They sought a world with more love and less war and for an expansion of consciousness and kindness. As a result, the culture began to reflect this atmosphere, with TV shows like Electric Company and Sesame Street and books like “The Giving Tree” encouraging these values in my generation. The paintings attempt to tap into this spirit.” 

While always pushing himself toward incremental innovation, the artist has, in this way, begun a healthy interrogation of his own motives. What does it mean to make these joyful, lovingly-crafted objects in a time of political upheaval? Is it permissible? Ethical? all together’s answer is to fight the gloom with goodwill, and darkness with dayglo dazzle and an implied message of hope. 
Viewing Room: Agathe Snow & Odessa Straub
March 4 - April 8, 2017

Opening reception
Saturday, March 4, 2017
6-8pm
545 West 25th Street
New York, NY 10001
212-463-8634

marlboroughcontemporary.com

Comments

Popular Posts