Showing posts with label Obituary - 2011. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Obituary - 2011. Show all posts

Friday, 30 December 2011

Helen Frankenthaler, 1928 - 2011

Helen Frankenthaler, Mountains and Sea, 1952
Helen Frankenthaler died on 27 December, 2011.
Frankenthaler has an assured place in C20 art history: her 1952 painting, Mountains and Sea, is credited with launching a new movement: Post-Painterly Abstraction or Colour Field Painting. William Agee has described the genesis of the painting:
In August 1952, Ms. Frankenthaler traveled to Nova Scotia, where she continued her practice of doing small landscapes. She painted in watercolor and oil on paper, working freely from nature. These studies helped to keep her limber and flexible, like a dancer or athlete tuning up or, as was the case here, a painter preparing for a major new effort.
On the afternoon of Oct. 29, back in New York, she tacked a large—roughly 7-by-10-foot—piece of untreated canvas to the floor of her studio to begin the largest painting she had ever undertaken. Her mind and her arms were filled with memories of the spectacular Cape Breton landscape. After roughing in a few charcoal marks as an initial guide, she poured highly thinned oil paint from coffee cans directly onto the canvas, as if she were drawing with color. She had no plan; she just worked, with control and discipline. At the end of the afternoon, when she had finished, she climbed on a ladder and studied the painting. She was not yet sure what she had done; she was “sort of amazed and surprised and interested.” … It soon became clear that what she had done was invent a new way of making art. (Quoted from article by James Panero in The New Criterion)

The story goes that Clement Greenberg took Morris Louis and Kenneth Noland to Frankenthaler's studio, in 1953, to see Mountains and Sea and they saw her pouring and staining method as the bridge between Pollock and what was possible. By allowing her colour to be in the weave of the canvas rather than on top of it Frankenthaler exemplified the 'flatness' that Greenberg was to identify as the essential condition of Modernist Painting in his 1960 essay of that name; an idea, and an achievement that was lampooned by Tom Wolfe in The Painted Word (1975).

Frankenthaler continued to produce lyrical and luminous abstracts through six decades - an achievement that was celebrated by an exhibition, Frankenthaler at 80: Six Decades, in 1980.

Helen Frankenthaler, Western Dream, 1957
Helen Frankenthaler, Nature Abhors a Vacuum, 1973
Helen Frankenthaler, Viewpoint II, 1979
Helen Frankenthaler, A Green Thought in a Green Shade, 1981
Helen Frankenthaler, Driving East, 2002

Friday, 23 December 2011

John Chamberlain, 1927 - 2011

John Chamberlain, Tambourinefrappe, 2010
John Chamberlain, the artist who made sculptures out of crushed cars, died on 21 December, 2011. Read obituaries in The Guardian, and in The New York Times.
Chamberlain found his material in 1957 when he made Shortstop from  2 car bumpers, run over repeatedly by another vehicle, and welded together. Although best known for the car junk work, Chamberlain also made work in diverse materials, including urethane foam, sheet metal and paper bags as well as making prints, paintings, photographs and films such as The Secret Life of Hernando Cortez (1968) featuring the Warhol superstars Taylor Mead and Ultra Violet
Common material is what an artist should use because it doesn't get in the way of doing an uncommon thing. (John Chamberlain quoted by Michael Auping in Ammann, J-C et al (1984) Art of Our Time: The Saatchi Collection, [Vol.] 2, London: Lund Humphries, p14.)
Read a statement by Chamberlain, made in in 1982, on the Chinati Foundation website, and watch a video of him making (or 'directing') work on the Gagosian Gallery website.
A comprehensive retrospective of Chamberlain's career will be presented at the  Guggenheim Museum in New York from 24 February to 13 May, 2012.
John Chamberlain, S, 1959

John Chamberlain, Superjuke, 2011
John Chamberlain, Dolores James, 1962

John Chamberlain, Untitled (Couch), 1990

John Chamberlain, Essex, 1960
John Chamberlain, Turm von Klythie, installation in Q205 shopping mall, Friedrichstadtpassagen, Berlin

Wednesday, 14 September 2011

Richard Hamilton, 1922 - 2011

Richard Hamilton died on 13 September, 2011. Read obituary by the late Norbert Lynton (1927 - 2007) and by Tim Head in Art Monthly, October 2011, No.350, p22. See also article based on an interview with Hans-Ulrich Obrist: Pop Daddy, in Tate Magazine, Issue 4 (2003) and Remembering Richard Hamilton as a Design Critic, by Alice Twemlow. Below is a selection of his work.
Richard Hamilton, Portrait of Hugh Gaitskell as a Famous Monster of Filmland, 1964
Richard Hamilton, Just what is it that makes today's homes so different, so appealing?, 1956 (Tate Collection)
Richard Hamilton, Hommage a Chrysler Corp., 1957 (Tate Collection)
Richard Hamilton, My Marilyn, 1965 (Tate Collection)
Richard Hamilton, Epiphany, 1964
Richard Hamilton, Swingeing London 67, 1968-9 (Tate Collection)

Richard Hamilton, The Citizen, 1982-3 (Tate Collection)
Marcel Duchamp, La Mariée mise à nu par ses célibataires, même: The Bride Stripped Bare by her Bachelors, Even (The Large Glass),  1915-23, reconstruction by Richard Hamilton 1965-6, lower panel remade 1985 (Tate Collection)

Wednesday, 3 August 2011

John Hoyland, 1934 - 2011

John Hoyland died on 31 July 2011. Read obituary by Mel Gooding.
Below is a selection of his work.
John Hoyland, April 1961, 1961
John Hoyland, 22.3.1969, 1969
John Hoyland, Untitled, 11.2.75, 1975
John Hoyland, Untitled, 28.3.74, 1974
John Hoyland, Saracen, 1977
John Hoyland, Celestial World,  2008

Monday, 25 July 2011

Lucian Freud, 1922 - 2011

Lucian Freud died on 20 July, 2011. Read obituary by Catherine Lampert and appreciation by William Feaver.
Below is a selection of his work:
Lucian Freud, Girl with a White Dog, 1951/52
Lucian Freud, Interior in Paddington, 1951
Lucian Freud, Francis Bacon, 1952
Lucian Freud, Wasteground with Houses, Paddington, 1970/72
Lucian Freud, Naked Portrait with Reflection, 1980
Lucian Freud, Two Japanese Wrestlers by a Sink, 1983/87
Lucian Freud, Reflection (Self Portrait), 1985

Wednesday, 6 July 2011

Cy Twombly, 1928 - 2011

Cy Twombly, one of my very favourite artists, died on 5th July, 2011. See obituary by Christopher Masters and an appreciation by Jonathan Jones.
A selection of his work:
Cy Twombly, Wilder Shores of Love (Bassano in Teverina), 1985

Cy Twombly, Hero and Leandro, 1985

Cy Twombly, Quattro Stagioni: Autunno, 1993-5

Cy Twombly, Ferragosto V, 1961
Cy Twombly, Untitled, 2001


Sunday, 24 April 2011

Tim Hetherington, 1970 - 2011; Chris Hondros, 1970 - 2011

Two outstanding photojournalists, Tim Hetherington and Chris Hondros were killed on 20th April, 2011, by an explosion in Misrata while covering the conflict in Libya. Read an obituary for Tim Hetherington, and Roger Tooth and Sean Smith on the challenges of war photojournalism. 
Tim Hetherington, militants, Nigeria, 2006
Tim Hetherington, a man carries a child wounded during an American helicopter attack, Afghanistan, 2007
Chris Hondros, A child felled by a mortar, carrying a bag of cassava leaves back to his family.
Chris Hondros, A child soldier  in Monrovia, Liberia

Wednesday, 20 April 2011

John McCracken, 1934 - 2011

John McCracken died on 8th April, 2011.
McCracken brought a West Coast sensibility to Minimalism with his gorgeously coloured, mirror-glossy planks and slabs. 
Read the obituary by Michael McNay. The images, below, are from David Zwirner gallery website.
Red Plank, 1967
Swift (left) and Vision (right), 2007
Interval, 2004
From left to right: Plain (1993), Diamond (1993), Fulcrum (1990), and Center (1989). Installation view of John McCracken at Hochscule für Angewandte Kunst, Vienna, 1995
Guardian, 1995

Saturday, 26 March 2011

Liz Taylor (1932 - 2011)

Elizabeth (Liz) Taylor died on 23rd March 2011. I am not sure that I have ever actually seen a Liz Taylor film! However, I do know her as the star of many Andy Warhol pictures. So, here, in memoriam, is a selection of those pictures.

From top: Silver Liz, 1963; Ten Lizes, 1963; Silver Liz with Blank, 1963; Liz, 1963.
See Elizabeth Taylor obituary and appreciation by David Thomson.