Back to the Figure
Recognizable forms are showing up in the works of a new wave of contemporary painters
- By Paul Trachtman
- Smithsonian magazine, October 2007, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 5)
For Schutz, there's no hard line between abstract and figurative painting. "I don't think of them as being something separate." In one new painting of a man and woman driving, the figures in the car seem almost plastic, as if they're melting in a hot Hawaiian landscape. "The way I'm thinking about them," she says, "is that in the future, if you were looking back at us, what features would remain, in a slightly distorted or generalized way?
"Maybe we're refiguring the figure," she continues. "Making paintings about painting just sounds crazy. All that talk about the paint. I think artists now want to be making meaning and having an effect. It's very different from the 20th century."
An exhibition of Schutz's work opens in November at the Contemporary Fine Arts Gallery in Berlin, Germany.
Neo Rauch
In Leipzig, 47-year-old German artist Neo Rauch is influencing a generation of post-cold-war painters with ambiguous paintings that mix realism with fantasy, the ordinary with the bizarre. Drawing on the graphic styles of Eastern Bloc comics and commercial art, the Social Realism of communist East Germany, his own dream imagery and elements of his urban landscape, Rauch paints the kind of figures you might find in propaganda posters, but he sets them in scenes that, he says, are "confusingly plausible"—at once familiar and strange.
Rauch describes his paintings as allegories with a personal iconography that remains private. He recently told an interviewer for New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art that his decisions as a painter may defy reason—even his own. But what he includes in a painting has its own reality, he says, because "despite all the desire for interpretation, painting should retain the privilege of placing what cannot be verbalized into an obvious structure." Rauch describes his process of making a painting as a struggle to balance what's recognizable with what's inexplicable. "For me, he has said, "painting means the continuation of a dream with other means."
An exhibition of Rauch's work is currently on view at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City (through Oct. 14).
Barnaby Furnas
Single Page « Previous 1 2 3 4 5 Next »
Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.









Comments (1)
A woman from Iran. Shiraz. Hi, I have several modern abstract human figure I need. Send me. Faty am
Posted by faty on January 20,2013 | 09:19 AM
I wonder if Katherine Lee is related to Barbara Lee, who I believe lives in Arizona and is my cousin. I am an artist also, and I live in Northern California. Thankyou.
Posted by christine lee schmitz on January 29,2008 | 04:22 PM
I was uplifted by Paul Trachtman's article because for years I have been using abstraction as a means of connection to realism and finally found validity for my work. Thank you, thank you, thank you, Rita Dianni-Kaleel www.diannifineart.com
Posted by Rita Dianni-Kaleel on January 15,2008 | 05:08 PM