George Condo
Jordi Alcaraz
Ruth Weisberg
Jerome Witkin
Patrick Graham
Francisco Zuniga
Reuben Nakian
Hans Burkhardt
Ben Shahn
Pablo Picasso
Mark Tobey
George Nama
Claire Falkenstein
Karel Appel
George Condo a collection of etchings reveal an intimate - and for many - a surprising aspect of Condo's work, display a more distilled aesthetic, rooted through great draftsmanship and line. The show is complemented by an accompanying large group exhibition of modern and contemporary paintings, drawings, prints and sculpture, featuring works by a number of the gallery's roster.
Works by the influential and provocative contemporary
American artist George Condo are the highlight of Jack Rutberg Fine Arts'
summer exhibition, with an opening reception Saturday, June 18, 5:00-8:00
p.m., and continuing through September 3, 2011.
"George Condo: a collection of etchings" at the Rutberg Gallery follows the
recent retrospective exhibition, George Condo - Mental States at New York's
New Museum, labeled "sensational" by The New York Times art critic Holland
Cotter. That major exhibition, organized by the Hayward Gallery, will
travel to Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen, Rotterdam (June 25-September 25,
2011); Hayward Gallery, London (October 18, 2011-January 15, 2012); and
Schirn Kunsthalle, Frankfurt (February 23-May 28, 2012).
Works in the Ruberg Gallery exhibition reveal an intimate - and for many - a
surprising aspect of Condo's work, display a more distilled aesthetic,
rooted through great draftsmanship and line. Condo is typically known for
bold paintings so brash as to be referred to as gonzo artificial realism.
"Artificial Realism" is the term the artist uses to describe his works,
which by turns are meditative, wry, irreverent and fantastical, reflecting
Condo's now-iconic surrealistic mash-up of Old and Modern Masters.
In the Jack Rutberg Fine Arts exhibition, Condo merges, through a series of
works entitled "More Sketches of Spain - for Miles Davis," his admiration of
Spanish masters along with his profound admiration for the music of Miles
Davis, whose own jazz masterpiece album recording was entitled "Sketches of
Spain." In these works from 1991, large-scale sheets and smaller works on
paper executed in etching and aquatint, Condo employs an eloquent
Picasso-like line with masterful draftsmanship and bravura, giving sly
reference to Picasso, Dali, Velazquez, etc.
In Condo's paintings, references to Miles Davis have been a long source of
inspiration. One such example is Condo's major painting in the Eli Broad
collection entitled "Dancing to Miles" exhibited at the 1987 Whitney
Biennial.
Born in 1957, George Condo had early associations with other avant-garde
artists of the eighties, such as Andy Warhol, Keith Haring and Jean-Michel
Basquiat, as well as many of the avant-garde artists in Europe. His
engagement with literary figures such as Allen Ginsberg are notable, as well
as a collaboration with writer William Burroughs. Condo's continued interest
in music is underscored in varied ways, and took a provocative turn when he
collaborated with rap star Kanye West, who commissioned Condo to create his
"banned" cover for the recent chart-topping album "My Beautiful Dark Twisted
Fantasy". Condo's impact upon artists of the last decade is particularly
profound, as evidenced by his being the major impact of such significant
contemporary painters as John Currin, Cecily Brown, Lisa Yuskavage, etc.
The Jack Rutberg Fine Arts exhibition of Condo's works - entitled "George
Condo: a collection of etchings" - is complemented by an accompanying large
group exhibition of modern and contemporary paintings, drawings, prints and
sculpture, featuring works by a number of the gallery's roster; among them
the contemporary artists Jordi Alcaraz, Ruth Weisberg, Jerome Witkin, and
Patrick Graham, and the estates of Francisco Zuniga, Reuben Nakian, and Hans
Burkhardt. A number of new acquisitions include works by Ben Shahn, Pablo
Picasso, Mark Tobey, George Nama, Claire Falkenstein, Karel Appel and
others.
Opening Saturday June 18, 5:00-8:00 p.m.
Jack Rutberg Fine Arts
357 North La Brea Avenue in Los Angeles.
Gallery hours are Tuesday - Friday, 10:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. and Saturday 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
The gallery is closed Sunday and Monday.