[SHOWS] Gerhard Richter @ Marian Goodman Gallery, New York

MARCH 30, 2020



Photograph: Marian Goodman Gallery website


GERHARD RICHTER

28 February – 25 April 2020

Exhibition on view: Friday, 28 February 2020


Marian Goodman Gallery New York is very pleased to announce an exhibition of new work by Gerhard Richter, on view from Friday, 28 February, through Saturday, 25 April 2020.

The exhibition will present new abstract paintings and new drawings from the past three years, as well as a series of ink jet prints from 2012, and overpainted photos from 2008.

Photograph: Marian Goodman Gallery website

The show coincides with a comprehensive survey of the artist’s work at The Met Breuer, New York, Gerhard Richter: Painting After All which will open to the public on 4 March 2020 and be on view through 5 July 2020.

The current exhibition marks the return to abstract painting that has been at the core of Gerhard Richter’s practice since he returned to the brush and squeegee in 2014, following a period of exploration from 2008 forward of digital technologies applied to painting in the Strips — and chance techniques in the poured lacquer Reverse Glass works. Richter’s return to painting at this juncture included an important cycle of abstract works, Birkenau, which utilized abstraction in an inspired confrontation with history, and new landscapes which focused on erasure of the figurative in favor of the abstract.

Photograph: Marian Goodman Gallery website

The new series of abstract works on view continue the trajectory reintroduced five years ago. The new paintings from 2016 to 2018 are mostly drawn from the Gerhard Richter Foundation and have been featured in important recent museum exhibitions of Richter’s work, such as Gerhard Richter: New Paintings at The Museum Ludwig, Cologne and the Albertinium, Dresden in 2017, and Gerhard Richter: Abstraction at Museum Barberini, Potsdam in 2018.

The abstract works 944-954 are marked by Richter’s hybrid approach of control and chance, precision and expression, with rich-hued compositions that contain a dynamic fabric of chromatic and material strata. Through tiered layers of color, built up through intervals of time and in breaches in that structure — through layers, blurs, and scrapes — the rhythm of choice and accident in Richter’s practice is on view in the North and South Gallery. The spaces of these works are simultaneously open and equivalent or in some cases more structured, bisected by vertical or horizontal movements. Some maintain a consistent all-over abstract pattern, and others reveal in their interstices a central sweep of comprehensive and pervading darkness beneath. Still others are charged with intense complementary colors that challenge each other on the canvas.

Photograph: Marian Goodman Gallery website

Grauwald, 2008, a series of ten overpainted photos in the South Gallery explores the intersection of grisaille and landscape. These works began as a series of photos taken by Richter in a forest near his home and are a distinct group within Richter’s practice of making daily photographs and then overpainting them. Here the verdant images are veiled with grey lacquer.

Photograph: Marian Goodman Gallery website

954-1 Grey Mirror, 2018, refers to principles that have equally guided Richter’s work since he first used glass in 1967. Using the material as a medium and subject matter, the glass works conceive of painting as a transparent window onto the world or as a mirror reflecting it, asserting the work’s independent value from images. Whether a partition between reality and illusion; a generator of images through transparency and reflection; or as an avatar of grey monochrome, the glass works provide alternate means to explore truth in painting.

Adjacent to Grauwald is a series of six works on paper from 2018-19, which are among the most recent drawings by Richter. Often conceived of independently and at various intervals from the paintings, the abstract drawings seem to exist outside of representation. In these works, articulated planes and zones of geometric space intersect with both architectural and free-form graphic lines, frottage, erasure, and color.

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