light gazing, ışığa bakmak

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Luc Tuymans

(não estava aqui e devia estar) com mescla de imagens copiadas de todo o lado.






(2005)




CCTV (2009)


Pidgeons (2001)




Fingers (1995)









"Dubbed the “Tuymans effect,” the artist’s unique approach to painting—using photographic source materials, working in series, and oscillating between representation and abstraction—has influenced countless artists of a younger generation. Tuymans often uses banal imagery to depict highly charged subject matter relating to significant historical events such as the Holocaust, the Belgian colonization of Congo, and the terrorist attacks of September 11, reminding us that things are not always what they seem to be.

His work poses critical questions: what do we remember and how? How does one represent and relate to significant events of the present as they are becoming part of history? What is our role in these events?

Tuymans frequently cites artists such as Flemish Renaissance painters Jan Van Eyck and Pieter Bruegel as important forebearers; yet, referring to Tuymans as an artist, instead of a painter, underscores his work’s strong relationship to photography, film, television, and the internet as sources of imagery. Tuymans was born in Belgium in 1958, and his paintings and films reflect the worldview he formed while growing up in Europe during the aftermath of World War II—a time when unthinkable tragedies had become reality and nations struggled to move forward. Tuymans is also of the first generation to grow up with television. The early and abundant exposure to this mediated experience and the banality of TV culture, along with his background in filmmaking, greatly influence the appearance of his work. He bases his compositions on photographs from existing sources such as Nazi wartime propaganda magazines, as well as Polaroids he has taken of objects and places from everyday life, but his process of mutation and distortion renders these sources unrecognizable. His faded palette has become a hallmark of his work—pale blues, grays, greens, and browns allude to the ungraspable quality of memory and underscore our inability to fully comprehend the complexity of historical and current events."
texto da exposição no MCA de Chicago até 9 de Janeiro.

e só porque era desta cor a luz que estava no patamar da serra.
para ver com mais seriedade, será melhor ir por aqui.

"All art is the art of painting", diz Tuymans.

"“Against the Day”, the show’s title, is taken from one of my favourite novels by Thomas Pynchon. It’s about the invention of paranoia in US literature. I’ve also been influenced by the 2008 films “There Will be Blood”, “No Country for Old Men” and “Control”. On a cynical level, these films achieve something the art world has not yet understood in that, in a sort of a reductive way, they work with a narrative on a different level. For example, there is no dialogue for 15 minutes at the beginning of “There Will be Blood” which is amazing."
daqui.

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