The isolated composition, life-size scale, and double-sided format of these new paintings herald an important departure from Sandberg’s last series. In his previous small-scale paintings depicting many figures the artist inverted a traditional analogy in Netherlandish art theory in which 'dead-color' under painting was identified with mortal flesh.
Contrary
Conner Contemporary Art is pleased to present Contrary, an extraordinary new cycle
of paintings by Erik Sandberg. In Contrary, Sandberg focuses on the power of a
single figure to evoke virtue or vice and dramatically narrows the gap between
painting and audience.
The isolated composition, life-size scale, and double-sided format of these new
paintings herald an important departure from Sandberg’s last series. In his previous
small-scale paintings depicting many figures the artist inverted a traditional
analogy in Netherlandish art theory in which ‘dead-color’ under painting was
identified with mortal flesh and colored oil glazes were likened to the spirit. In
these earlier panels the artist created ethereal figures in monochromatic
preliminary paintings, then, systematically imposed layers of colored glaze upon
them to describe a variety of weaknesses of the flesh.
In Contrary, Sandberg extends his investigation of the relation between
monochromatic form and oil color to reframe a debate that raged amidst artists
during the Renaissance and Baroque periods over the relative merit of painting and
sculpture. Leonardo da Vinci, a distinguished advocate of painting, and
Michelangelo, a passionate champion of sculpture, fueled the controversy. Assertions
that painting’s illusionism could move the soul to desire and that sculpture’s
tactile modality was conducive to venal impulses invested the argument with moral
complexity.
Sandberg enriches this discourse by implementing his oil glaze technique in the
style of the Flemish Baroque painter Peter Paul Rubens to depict models situated
upon plinths and columns evocative of the display of sculptural figures. He draws
upon poses of Italian Renaissance statues, such as Donatello’s David, which is
recalled by his female personification of Courage. The artist arrays his statuesque
figures with a combination of modern undergarments and attributes from schematic
illustrations of Cesare Ripa’s Renaissance emblem book Iconologia. He thus creates
unsettlingly abstract yet immediate and corporeal presences that evoke pictorial
tension between the representation of solid three-dimensional form and the painterly
articulation of surface qualities. This liaison between the carnality of his
painting style and the idealism of his sculptural sources thematizes the
psychological tension of moral disparity he symbolizes in his imagery. Rendering
each figure on either s
ide of his door-like panels as simultaneously beautiful and repulsive, Sandberg
visually seduces viewers to enter a conceptual labyrinth where they must negotiate
their own paths between the polarities of virtue and vice.
Also on view (gallery 2): Joe Ovelman : Post-It 3 - the latest in a series of
quirky, autobiographical sharpie on paper drawings. Through October 28th.
The gallery is also pleased to announce the Fall 2006 series of Discuss. Going
beyond the typical artist’s talk format, Discuss events pair gallery artists in
conversation with their peers, outside curators and collectors concerning the
current exhibit and their artistic practice. This season, Discuss conversations are
available exclusively via mp3 download on our website or via podcast at
http://www.itunes.com
Available on/before September 27 - Erik Sandberg in conversation with Kristen
Hileman, assistant curator at the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden,
Washington, DC.
Available on/before November 15 - Leo Villareal in conversation with Molly
Donovan, associate curator of modern and contemporary art, The National Gallery of
Art, Washington, DC.
Opening night reception: Friday, September 15th from 6-8pm.
Conner Contemporary Art
1730 Connecticut Ave., NW, 2nd Floor - Washington
Hours: Tuesday - Saturday 10 am to 5 pm and by appointment