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PRESS RELEASE HANS HARTUNG
THE LAST PAINTINGS 1989
Opens Friday 29 October from 6 to 8 pm
Exhibition continues through 30 December 2010
Cheim & Read is pleased to announce a landmark exhibition of Hans Hartung’s
late paintings, dating from 1987–1989. This is the first showing of Hartung’s
works in New York since his controversial 1975 exhibition at the Metropolitan
Museum of Art, and focuses on the artistic output of his last years of life. The
show will be accompanied by a full color catalogue with an essay by Joe Fyfe.
Hans Hartung was born in Leipzig, Germany in 1904, but is often identified by his
artistic activity in Paris and his involvement in the French Art Informel or Tachist
movements. His life and work were greatly affected by the political and social
upheavals in France and Germany during the Second World War; after fleeing
his native Germany (he was considered a “degenerate” artist by the Gestapo) he
fought with the French Foreign Legion and lost his right leg on the Alsatian front.
His post-war paintings – emotional abstractions which explored varieties of gesture and mark – were considered
reactions to his experiences in battle. In fact, the paintings were surprisingly premeditated, carefully copied
from sometimes much earlier, spontaneous drawings enlarged to fit the canvas. Originally an economic decision
(predetermined compositions guaranteed successful outcomes), Hartung’s exacting realization of his paintings is
evidence of the great control, technical aptitude and thoughtfulness with which he approached his work, as well
as his understanding of, as Fyfe states in his catalogue essay, “painting as an act of mimesis.”
As a child, Hartung tried to capture the quick flash of lightening in order to contain and comprehend its unpredictable
energy. Light, space and shadow proved to be life long themes; nature and the cosmos were influential
forces. Photography was a helpful aid – Hartung took over 30,000 photographs, mostly recording patterns of
light and dark, which he used as references for his work. Though his paintings were decidedly abstract, with
seemingly little foundation in representation or figuration, Hartung spent much of his early career copying works
by Rembrandt, Goya and Van Gogh. He felt an artist’s single scribbled line could contain enough expressive energy
and information for the whole image – such was the authority of an artist’s individual mark.
Hartung’s career, especially in his home countries of France and Germany, was successful. His shows and awards
were numerous; mid-career, in 1960, he won the Venice Biennale’s International Prize. This also coincided with
his transition from pre-planned compositions to paintings improvised directly on the canvas. Exploration and
experimentation with various and unusual tools ensued, and included lithography rollers, plant fronds, wheelchair
wheels and gardening paraphernalia. Hartung also began to experiment with sprayed paint, using a set up
similar to an auto-body shop and eventually appropriating garden hoses and sprayers originally developed for
disseminating fertilizer.
In 1975, Henry Geldzahler, then the Metropolitan Museum’s curator of contemporary art, organized an exhibition
of Hartung’s recent paintings at the museum. Though several contemporary artists, including Frank Stella
and James Rosenquist, reported favorably of the show, it was highly misunderstood, and Hartung’s work was not
shown again in New York until now.
In the last year of his life (Hartung died in December 1989), he produced 360 paintings – a monumental accomplishment,
especially given his restricted physical condition. Confined to his wheelchair, he seemed to focus
entirely on his creative output; his late work presents a sense of freedom, innovation and ambition that was
connected to his previous work. His spray paint technique facilitated productivity – the sensitivity of the sprayer
allowed Hartung to exercise control over the canvas without physical strain. The tool also provided exceptional
variations in paint layering and effects, from smooth, transparent blocks of color to saturated, calligraphic drizzles
of line. These works hint at the natural world, the qualities of light and shadow, and the infinitude of space,
while remaining distinct artistic entities, anticipatory of contemporary concerns. Ultimately, they are witness to
Hartung’s continuous, fearless exploration, even with the looming inevitability of his failing health. Hartung stated:
“As for me I want to remain free, mind body and spirit. I don’t want neither myself nor anybody else to shut me
off it all.”
In an adjacent gallery at Cheim & Read, Abstract Works on Paper from a Private Collection will be exhibited
in concurrence with the Hans Hartung show. The dialogue between these works by de Kooning,
Mitchell, Kusama, Rothko, Tobey, Twombly among others, and Hartung’s late work will provide an interesting
counterpoint.
For more information please contact the gallery at 212-242-7727 or gallery@cheimread.com
Cheim & Read 547 West 25 Street
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