Berlin 00:00:00 London 00:00:00 New York 00:00:00 Chicago 00:00:00 Los Angeles 00:00:00 Shanghai 00:00:00
members login here
Region
Country / State
City
Genre
Artist
Exhibition

studio 1.1: 'PAINTING OVER' part II - 13 June 2013 to 7 July 2013

Current Exhibition


13 June 2013 to 7 July 2013
open: Wed to Sun 12-6 pm
studio 1.1
57a Redchurch Street
Nearest tubes Liverpool/Old Street
London
E2 7DJ
United Kingdom
Europe
T: + 44 (0) 7952 986 696
F:
M:
W: www.studio1-1.co.uk











above David Micheaud, 2013


Artists in this exhibition: Deborah Gough, David Micheaud, Robert Rush, James Ryan, Paul Savage, William Stein


'PAINTING OVER'part II

with

Deborah Gough, David Micheaud, Robert Rush,
James Ryan, Paul Savage and William Stein


In 1967 Greenberg was already talking about the periodic death of painting - now it seems to have become paradigmatic; not to say parodic.

It's easy to string out the prepositions: what's painting up to? What's it for? What, to get serious about it, is there in it? Because maybe the last comprehensive formulation about the point of art came when Gautier decided art could exist for its own sake, 'l'art pour l'art' (another preposition). And that was nearly 200 years ago. But at the point that line was taken, art floated free. It's survived, as Auden put it, 'in the valley of its saying' (it's the line after his famous statement that poetry makes nothing happen.)

A very long time ago we lost the habit of wanting to ask any of those awkward questions. The history of art is viewed as a continuum, as if a canvas by Ellsworth Kelly and one by Titian and a fresco by Giotto were somehow replacements for each other. We hardly remember that splitting from any social purpose art has pursued its own course, maintaining an autonomy only briefly disturbed by a detour into the service of revolution (it didn't help enough); until, of course, it was co-opted by commerce. Art's a commodity, then. Anything else?

'I have nothing to say, and I am saying it', Cage famously said. Slightly less famously, and crucially, he went on 'And that is poetry as I know it.'

We have isolated a small patch of contemporary painting, the one we're most familiar with and that means most to us. All the works have been made in the last few months. There's abstract, abstraction, and figuration. An opportunity at least to start thinking about any crisis and whether or not it’s over.

LOOK! (Painting for a Reason) thanks to Johnny Bristol/the Osmonds, no thanks to Boyzone.

'ANXIETY/ACCEPTANCE/TRANSCENDENCE'
or 'What to Do, What to Wear? What on Earth'

studio 1.1



John Summers
Keran James



SIGN UP FOR NEWSLETTERS
Follow on Twitter

Click on the map to search the directory

USA and Canada Central America South America Western Europe Eastern Europe Asia Australasia Middle East Africa
SIGN UP for ARTIST MEMBERSHIP SIGN UP for GALLERY MEMBERSHIP