16 July -
15 September 2010
Gallery 1
Dana Schutz
Tourette's Paintings
Gallery 2
Eugene Von Bruenchenhein
Dana Schutz
Tourette's Paintings
16 July - 15 September 2010
Some of Dana Schutz' early images, painted about a decade ago, told the story of Frank, the last man on earth; other pictures showed people eating their own bodies; a few dealt directly with political or overtly social issues. Her flamboyant style, which frequently makes references to art history, and especially to the history of figurative painting, is colourful, gestural, and visceral.
It would be a mistake, nonetheless, to think of Dana Schutz' art as unsubtle. She works with oppositions - painting and concept, intimacy and distance, cruelty and compassion, history and the present - and the meaning of her work lies in the liminal space where they abut and come together. Besides, there is puzzlement in her paintings, and not a little apprehension. They are more gloomy than they look, because their humour (much of it self-deprecating) disguises an underlying suspicion that the world doesn't make a lot of sense, and when it does it doesn't make much difference to things anyway.
According to the artist, the works in this exhibition are 'like Tourette's paintings', in that they portray involuntary actions: 'Sometimes imagery comes to mind without any kind of context or larger narrative - a completely irrational, sometimes painful kind of imagery'. It is not impossible, these paintings seem to suggest, that such responses to the world might be more complex and intelligible than they first appear. They may, above all, signal a deep desire to escape from the clutches of an overbearing and disturbing world.
Click here to view events for this exhibition.
Click here to download the exhibition invitation.
Click here to read a review of the exhibition by Aidan Dunne, for the Irish Times.
The exhibition is accompanied by a new publication containing texts by the artist and Alexander Dumbadze.
The Douglas Hyde Gallery gratefully thanks the artist, Zach Feuer, of Zach Feuer Gallery, New York, and CFA, Berlin, for their help and support.
It would be a mistake, nonetheless, to think of Dana Schutz' art as unsubtle. She works with oppositions - painting and concept, intimacy and distance, cruelty and compassion, history and the present - and the meaning of her work lies in the liminal space where they abut and come together. Besides, there is puzzlement in her paintings, and not a little apprehension. They are more gloomy than they look, because their humour (much of it self-deprecating) disguises an underlying suspicion that the world doesn't make a lot of sense, and when it does it doesn't make much difference to things anyway.
According to the artist, the works in this exhibition are 'like Tourette's paintings', in that they portray involuntary actions: 'Sometimes imagery comes to mind without any kind of context or larger narrative - a completely irrational, sometimes painful kind of imagery'. It is not impossible, these paintings seem to suggest, that such responses to the world might be more complex and intelligible than they first appear. They may, above all, signal a deep desire to escape from the clutches of an overbearing and disturbing world.
Click here to view events for this exhibition.
Click here to download the exhibition invitation.
Click here to read a review of the exhibition by Aidan Dunne, for the Irish Times.
The exhibition is accompanied by a new publication containing texts by the artist and Alexander Dumbadze.
The Douglas Hyde Gallery gratefully thanks the artist, Zach Feuer, of Zach Feuer Gallery, New York, and CFA, Berlin, for their help and support.
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