Eisenman has since the 1990s caught the eye with her figurative paintings that, playfully and with great artistic freedom, cross stylistic and compositional elements from the history of art from Renaissance painting to Modernism with comics, slapstick, TV culture, pornography and subcultural image strategies.
Solo show
The American artist Nicole Eisenman (born 1965 in Verdun, France, lives and
works in New York) has since the 1990s caught the eye with her figurative
paintings that, playfully and with great artistic freedom, cross stylistic
and compositional elements from the history of art from Renaissance painting
to Modernism (but not Postmodernism) with comics, slapstick, TV culture,
pornography and subcultural image strategies. The exhibition in Kunsthalle
Zürich is the first comprehensive review of this artist in an institution.
For their second touring venue, the almost 30 oil paintings and over 100
drawings will go on tour to Le Plateau in Paris in June.
Opulent group scenes, which go back to historical painting and the Social
Realist wall paintings of the 1930s, appear next to portraits and
mythological burlesques that are painted both in masterly style and in crude
caricatures. What is central to Eisenman¹s oeuvre is an excessive,
drawing-based work complex that comprises all the classical picture genres
and a wit formulated between the outrageous and the idiotic.
Nicole Eisenman's work is an inspired and gleeful deconstruction of
conventions in art and society and questions social models, above all by
reversing female and male role clichés. At the beginning of the 1990s Nicole
Eisenman made a name for herself with monumental murals and large-scale
drawing installations in tune with her generation of artists who, in
contrast to the dominance of photography and language in the work of their
predecessors, established painting and sculpture as central to their
personal vocabulary. In 1993 and 1994 she took part in two exhibitions that,
independent of each other, took place in the ICA London and in New York¹s
New Museum and the Wight Art Gallery in California under the title Bad
Girls, which presented so-called feminist positions in works that Marcia
Tucker in the catalogue to the exhibit describes as: 'irreverent,
anti-ideological, nondoctrinaire, nondidactic, unpolemical and thoroughly
unladylike.' Sue Williams, Nicola Tyson, Collier Schorr, Zoe Leonard, Helen
Chatwick are only several of the names that bear mentioning in this context.
Michelangelo, Géricault, Rubens, Norman Rockwell, Delacroix, Titian,
Breughel, Picasso, Matisse, Ingres, Hogarth, Dürer, New Expressionism, the
underground cartoons of the East Village, horror films, folk art, kitsch,
pornography, Beckmann, Dix and Grosz are associations that come to mind when
encountering this artist¹s work. In her paintings, groups of naked Amazons
romp in grandiose scenes that depict utopian versions of other world orders.
Naked, intertwined male bodies hover like clouds or sit in trees above
lasciviously bored women; archaic social rituals encounter futurist visions
and are turned topsy-turvy; sexual promises in art and the media are
bitingly undercut with a great deal of humour and reformulated from an
explicitly lesbian point of view.
Nicole Eisenman's figures move in lush dream worlds and idylls; they carry
out familiar actions in familiar public locations, such as academies,
museums, places of commerce, of sports and of politics. Eisenman¹s work is
about power relations and powerlessness, about art and commerce, consumerism
and sex, about the possibilities made available by professionalism and
dilettantism and how artistic success and everyday life are constructed. At
the same time it deals with the subsequent question of how the individual
and she herself as artist and woman can take up a position within these
roles.
Eisenman's narratives of grotesque reformulations of social orders or her
depictions of human individuality are always interspersed with possible
failure or scenic breakdown: the pictorial content, the painting procedure
and the message contradict each other, deal with a state of decline in
historical as well as current conventions. The work Dysfunctional Family
(2000) shows a deceptive idyllic family: a baby looks with despair at its
excrements; papa smokes a pipe and mama lasciviously opens her thighs.
Eisenman portrays an ambivalent scene of highly charged behaviour in such a
way that all actions could mean something else.
In her drawings and especially in her large-scale installations with works
on paper and the most diverse materials, the artist often includes herself.
In 1995 she took part in the Whitney Biennial with a large mural (Exploding
Whitney) that showed the museum in ruins and with an installation of
drawings entitled Whitney ŒBuy Any Ol¹ Painting Sale', which parodied the
artist Eisenman, art and commerce alike, and whose position between punk,
DIY, dilettantism and old-masterly skill made everyone sit up and take
notice.
For the exhibition in Kunsthalle Zürich, the artist is planning to install a
whole room with works on paper, objects and graffiti-like interventions that
she calls a drawing clinic. The unfinished and the finished will be set side
by side. Nicole Eisenman invites artists from Zurich to continue work on the
abortive, incomplete works that she has abandoned. Her performative approach
to an installation in an institutional context is paralleled by her routine
treatment of art. The artist publishes' the (quite outrageous) e-zine
'Ridykeulous', in which she introduces the works of other female artists,
and maintains an art blog on the Internet with the title 'A Blog Called
Nowhere'.
Nicole Eisenman's newer paintings span a bridge between 'bad' painting and
increasingly sumptuous, impasto forms of abstraction. The work Progress:
Real and Imagined (2006) is a monumental painting in two parts, populated by
diverse scenes of civilization's ideal and catastrophic cases, with Biblical
echoes, cave men, ghosts, hunters and gatherers, wars, trade, destruction,
violence and flying hamburgers that hang in the dramatic sky like zeppelins.
From left to right the viewer wanders through an apocalyptic world to land
in the world of art, of art-making and an ostensible rescue in the ark of
imagination that rocks on the stormy waves of life's ocean. There is even
alongside a slapstick-like lifebelt held above the water a Swiss flag
aloft in the wind and rising from one of the lifeboats that circle around
the picture of an artist in his ark studio, whose imaginings and artistic
realizations probably not only have created the broad stylist multiplicity
painted in the picture, but also the simultaneity of all times and styles,
all possibilities and catastrophes.
Opening: 30 March 6-9pm
Kunsthalle Zurich
Limmatstrasse 270 - Zurich