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Glenn Brown
dal 19/2/2009 al 9/5/2009
Tuesday-Sunday 10-17.50

Segnalato da

Alex O'Neill


approfondimenti

Glenn Brown



 
calendario eventi  :: 




19/2/2009

Glenn Brown

Tate Liverpool, Liverpool

Borrowing from art history and popular culture, Glenn Brown transforms a familiar visual history into something extraordinary and alien. Paintings by Rembrandt, Fragonard, Salvador Dali, Frank Auerbach and many others, including the illustrators for science fiction novels, have all been used by the artist as starting blocks. Yet it is not original paintings that he turns to for inspiration but reproductions - images printed on postcards, in books or digitised on the internet. Brown is fascinated by how an image changes when it is reproduced. Often cropped, its scale shifts as it is transferred to a new format.


comunicato stampa

Borrowing from art history and popular culture, Glenn Brown transforms a familiar visual history into something extraordinary and alien. Paintings by Rembrandt, Fragonard, Salvador Dalí, Frank Auerbach and many others, including the illustrators for science fiction novels, have all been used by the artist as starting blocks. Yet it is not original paintings that Brown turns to for inspiration but reproductions – images printed on postcards, in books or digitised on the internet.

Brown is fascinated by how an image changes when it is reproduced. Often cropped, its scale shifts as it is transferred to a new format. Texture is lost and colour distorted as the inaccuracies of the printing process take hold. Brown adopts these various accidental alterations as painterly strategies, grossly exaggerating them to question what it is to paint and to transfer people, places and objects into this medium. In his work, naturalistic colour becomes putrid or kitsch, figures are elongated and enlarged into the grotesque, flesh grows or begins to rot and heavy impasto brush marks, painstakingly copied, are rendered completely flat.

Spanning the last eighteen years, this exhibition is selected and arranged according to Brown's perennial intrigue in the history and processes of painting. Groups of works reveal the artist's manipulation of brushwork, form, technique, subject matter, genre, narrative and colour. To look at one of Brown's works is to witness an unravelling of the languages of painting and the modes of pictorial solution that have preoccupied artists for centuries.

Glenn Brown was born in Hexham in 1966. From 1984 to 1992 he studied at Norwich School of Art, the Bath College of Higher Education and then Goldsmith's College, London. He was shortlisted for the Turner Prize in 2000.

All quotations from the artist on these pages are taken from interviews published in the following exhibition catalogues:

* Francesco Bonami and Laurence Sillars (eds.), 'Laurence Sillars in Conversation with Glenn Brown', Glenn Brown, Tate Liverpool, Liverpool 2009
* Katarzyna Uszynsja, 'Interview with Glenn Brown', Glenn Brown, Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna, 2008
* Rochelle Steiner, 'Interview with Glenn Brown', Glenn Brown, Serpentine Gallery, London, 2004

Exhibtion organised by Tate Liverpool and the Fondazione Sandretto Re Rebaudengo, Turin.

For further information and images please contact the Tate Liverpool Press Office:
Stacey Arnold t: 0151 702 7444 e: stacey.arnold@tate.org.uk
Alex O’Neill t: 0151 702 7445 e: alex.oneill@tate.org.uk

Tate Liverpool
Albert Dock L3 - Liverpool
Hours: Tuesday–Sunday 10.00–17.50
Tickets: £5.90 (£4.40 concessions). Free for Tate Members.

IN ARCHIVIO [66]
Two exhibitions
dal 20/11/2015 al 13/2/2016

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