Leap of Faith. Drawing equally from lifestyle magazines and life experience, Mull cleverly appropriates visual material from both; his paintings function against the framework of flickering collective memory and within the cultural unrest and individual discontent of the present.
I’ve always had a certain fascination.
It’s basically paint what you know, and this is what I grew up with.
- Martin Mull
Ben Brown Fine Arts is pleased to present our third solo exhibition of works by American painter Martin Mull, whose
new works reacquaint his London audience with the discordant promises of post-World War II suburban America he
grew up with. Drawing equally from lifestyle magazines and life experience, Martin Mull cleverly appropriates visual
material from both; his paintings function against the framework of flickering collective memory and within the cultural
unrest and individual discontent of the present.
Throughout his multi-faceted career in stand-up comedy, music, film and television, Mull has become well known as an
ironist and satirist, however, the comedic quality of his paintings is contradicted by an equal amount of sorrow – he has
moved beyond irony and satire to successfully achieve depth and meaning.
Mull’s careful compositions are a continuation of the lineage of American sinister, brooding, mystifying narrative
painting of Edward Hopper, Erick Fischl, Mark Tansey and John Currin. Mull’s narratives are complicated and multi-
layered – he successfully builds up a sense of tension in his paintings by juxtaposing contradictory elements or placing
figures in unlikely contexts. If there is a narrative in Mull’s work it is hinted at rather than depicted literally and it is left
to the viewers and their disparate points of view to determine their own interpretation. It is more of a psychological
story that is moody, haunting and sometimes disturbing as he delves with insight into the underlying flaws of the
American dream.
Leap of Faith, 2011, which lends the exhibition its name, encapsulates the dramatic and discordant elements that
distinguish Mull’s paintings. Framed within a border of vintage chintz, three young men are seen happily suspended in
midair, appearing to jump into an awaiting body of water. Unbeknownst to the would-be swimmers, behind them a
train steams ahead at full speed, leaving the viewer to disentangle the theatrical, dream-like scene in front of them.
Mull’s deftly painted figures and locomotive in a monochromatic palette give the impression of compact cinematic
snap shots, or an old photograph; this combined with the unexpected bursts of colour of the leaves in the foreground
suggest the imperfect clarity of hindsight. An essential component of live theatre, film and television, this suspension
of disbelief that Mull asks from his viewers is the ultimate leap of faith.
Martin Mull lives and works in Los Angeles. Born in 1943, in Chicago, Illinois, Mull was raised in Ohio and later received
his BFA in 1965 followed by an MFA in 1967 from the Rhode Island School of Design. Having exhibited extensively over
the past thirty years, Mull’s work is in the permanent collection of The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Los
Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles, The Whitney Museum of Art, New York and the Total Contemporary Art
Museum, Seoul amongst others.
Image: House Hunter, 2010. Signed and dated. Oil on linen 61 x 50.8 cm; (24 x 20 in.)
For press inquiries, please contact Jemma Beeley at 020 7734 8888 or jemma@benbrownfinearts.com
Private View 4 December 2012 6 – 8 pm
Ben Brown Fine Arts
12 Brook’s Mews, London W1K 4DG
Monday to Friday: 11am - 6pm
Saturdays: 10.30am - 2:30pm