Sprayed: Works from 1929-2015
Gagosian is pleased to present 鈥淪prayed鈥, organised by Jona Lueddeckens and Greg Bergner.
This extensive exhibition spanning four generations explores the myriad ways in which artists have employed the impulsive yet de-personalized and non-gestural forces of spray. It begins with Paul Klee's work on paper Seltsames Theater (1929), where he improvised with a blowpipe to achieve hazy background effects in a circus scene. This tentative experiment presaged the bold and diverse artistic licence that would come with the post-war advent of aerosol paint as a consumer product and the use of the industrial paint compressor.
From the mid-1950s, sculptor David Smith sprayed enamels over various studio objects and offcuts laid on canvas and paper as stencils; the resulting images recalled Paleolithic cave paintings made by blowing pigment over hands pressed flat. John Chamberlain blurred the lines between painting and sculpture by torquing scrap automobile parts into painterly abstractions, then enhancing the original paint surface with fresh sprays of coloured lacquer. Lawrence Weiner's interaction with the medium resulted in a simple, dispassionate instruction: Two Minutes of Spray Paint Directly Upon the Floor From a Standard Aerosol Spray Can (1968); while Martin Barr茅 tested it at different distances and pressures in a series of rapid strikes producing sequences of stripes and cryptic punctuations on paper.
From the late sixties, spray assumed a new scale and level of exposure, from Dan Christensen's vast 鈥減ost-painterly鈥 abstractions鈥攚here he used a spray gun to create intersecting coloured loops of paint alive with cool-tempered energies鈥攁nd Jules Olitski's ethereal gradations of tone, texture, and depth; to Richard Artschwager's furtive urban Blps; Jean-Michel Basquiat's existential aphorisms tagged on New York City walls; and Keith Haring's exuberant political pictography that covered bodies, canvases, and subways. In the ultimate debunking of Ab Ex posturing, Andy Warhol produced a series of alchemical Oxidation Paintings by urinating on canvases primed with metallic paint.
Artists who came to prominence in the 1990s, such as Albert Oehlen, Christopher Wool, and Rudolf Stingel continue both to employ and emulate spray in sophisticated painterly compositions that uphold a formal tension between direct and indirect mark-making, free-form and control. In recent years, further exploration of this zone between deliberation and contingency has resulted in Tauba Auerbach's subtle creased canvases, Sterling Ruby's huge landscapes in which undelineated forms merge with atmospheric neon layers, and Kim Gordon's Wreath Paintings, which use readymade decorative wreaths as stencils for vertiginous abstractions. Katharina Grosse鈥攁 standout in the current Venice Biennale with her entropic environment enlivened with 鈥渞adioactive鈥 colour鈥攗nderscores the urgent temporality of the medium in intricately layered canvases where the action of painting overlaps and intersects at different frequencies.
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Gagosian is pleased to present 鈥淪prayed鈥, organised by Jona Lueddeckens and Greg Bergner.
This extensive exhibition spanning four generations explores the myriad ways in which artists have employed the impulsive yet de-personalized and non-gestural forces of spray. It begins with Paul Klee's work on paper Seltsames Theater (1929), where he improvised with a blowpipe to achieve hazy background effects in a circus scene. This tentative experiment presaged the bold and diverse artistic licence that would come with the post-war advent of aerosol paint as a consumer product and the use of the industrial paint compressor.
From the mid-1950s, sculptor David Smith sprayed enamels over various studio objects and offcuts laid on canvas and paper as stencils; the resulting images recalled Paleolithic cave paintings made by blowing pigment over hands pressed flat. John Chamberlain blurred the lines between painting and sculpture by torquing scrap automobile parts into painterly abstractions, then enhancing the original paint surface with fresh sprays of coloured lacquer. Lawrence Weiner's interaction with the medium resulted in a simple, dispassionate instruction: Two Minutes of Spray Paint Directly Upon the Floor From a Standard Aerosol Spray Can (1968); while Martin Barr茅 tested it at different distances and pressures in a series of rapid strikes producing sequences of stripes and cryptic punctuations on paper.
From the late sixties, spray assumed a new scale and level of exposure, from Dan Christensen's vast 鈥減ost-painterly鈥 abstractions鈥攚here he used a spray gun to create intersecting coloured loops of paint alive with cool-tempered energies鈥攁nd Jules Olitski's ethereal gradations of tone, texture, and depth; to Richard Artschwager's furtive urban Blps; Jean-Michel Basquiat's existential aphorisms tagged on New York City walls; and Keith Haring's exuberant political pictography that covered bodies, canvases, and subways. In the ultimate debunking of Ab Ex posturing, Andy Warhol produced a series of alchemical Oxidation Paintings by urinating on canvases primed with metallic paint.
Artists who came to prominence in the 1990s, such as Albert Oehlen, Christopher Wool, and Rudolf Stingel continue both to employ and emulate spray in sophisticated painterly compositions that uphold a formal tension between direct and indirect mark-making, free-form and control. In recent years, further exploration of this zone between deliberation and contingency has resulted in Tauba Auerbach's subtle creased canvases, Sterling Ruby's huge landscapes in which undelineated forms merge with atmospheric neon layers, and Kim Gordon's Wreath Paintings, which use readymade decorative wreaths as stencils for vertiginous abstractions. Katharina Grosse鈥攁 standout in the current Venice Biennale with her entropic environment enlivened with 鈥渞adioactive鈥 colour鈥攗nderscores the urgent temporality of the medium in intricately layered canvases where the action of painting overlaps and intersects at different frequencies.
Artists on show
- Albert Oehlen
- Alex Israel
- Andy Warhol
- Blair Thurman
- Charline von Heyl
- Christopher Wool
- Dan Christensen
- Dan Colen
- David Batchelor
- David Ostrowski
- David Smith
- Dike Blair
- Ed Ruscha
- Franz West
- Hans Hartung
- Harmony Korine
- Ida Ekblad
- Jack Goldstein
- Jean-Michel Basquiat
- Jeff Elrod
- Jeff Koons
- John Chamberlain
- John Latham
- Joseph Logan
- Jules Olitski
- Julian Schnabel
- Justin Adian
- Katharina Grosse
- Keith Haring
- Kim Gordon
- Lawrence Weiner
- Martin Barré
- Mira Schendel
- Nate Lowman
- Olivier Mosset
- Pamela Rosenkranz
- Paul Klee
- Piero Golia
- Richard Artschwager
- Richard Hamilton
- Richard Wright
- Rudolf Stingel
- Sigmar Polke
- Stephen Prina
- Sterling Ruby
- Steven Parrino
- Takashi Murakami
- Tauba Auerbach
- Ugo Rondinone
- Wade Guyton
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