Lisa Ruyter's paintings have been based on individual photographs and have formed a map of her movements around the globe as well as her personal development. Alex Katz's exhibition consists of rarely seen works from 1970-2006 and serves as a retrospective of the artist's drawings.
LISA RUYTER
THE COMFORT OF STRANGERS
Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac is pleased to announce the third solo show of the American artist
Lisa Ruyter who lives and works in Vienna.
Since 1996, Lisa Ruyter's paintings have been based on individual photographs taken by the artist and
have, therefore, formed a map of her movements around the globe as well as her personal
development. The photographs, although casual, are always intentional. One cannot imagine Ruyter
photographing these scenes without an implied audience. Ruyter then selects a small percentage of
these pictures and begins the process of fixing them in paint. She "transcribes" the photographs onto
the picture plane, selecting the portions of the image that she wishes to render, leaving out details she
finds trivial, while focusing on others. Once the paintings have been drawn in, Ruyter begins to map
out colors, filling in her own drawings. The final fixing of the images occurs when Ruyter, usually in a
single sitting, redraws the lines with a paint pen, bringing the painting into sharp focus.
The power of Ruyter’s paintings lies in the way she takes on seemingly ordinary images and makes
them extraordinary. What appear, at first, as giant paint-by-number works slowly reveal themselves to
be complex arrangements of flat colors with poignant, powerful subjects. The effect freezes the
narrative and pushes it toward abstraction. Ruyter titles all of her paintings after films, though any
relation of the title to the subject matter is incidental.
Whether painting crowds, party scenes, fashion models swaying down the catwalk, trees or Greek
island landscapes, Ruyter's need to document the world around her through this disinterested,
removed lens where the viewer is both there and not there is the stance of an original artist with a
keen eye and cool, distanced vantage point. About her work, Ruyter says, “I have consciously created
a style that will keep the work interesting or relevant, and that will create points of entry for art
historians as well as someone who has never before considered art.”
The artist has shown her work in galleries and museums the world over, including, among others, the
Museum of Modern Art (New York), the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (USA), the Elgiz
Museum of Contemporary Art (Istanbul), the Denver Art Museum (USA), Collection le Consortium
(Dijon, France), La Colección Jumex (México), the Essl Collection (Klosterneuburg/Vienna), and
Valencia Arte Contemporáneo (Spain). Lisa Ruyter has had more than twenty-five solo exhibitions in
leading galleries around the world, and, in 2008, solo shows will be presented in Paris, Tokyo and
Vienna. Her work has also been seen in numerous group shows and at international art fairs.
For further information, please contact elena Bortolotti: +331 42 72 99 00 or elena@ropac.net
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ALEX KATZ
DRAWINGS
“If I get the surface right everything will be there.”
Alex Katz, 1991
Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac is pleased to announce the opening of a second show devoted to the drawings of the
American painter Alex Katz. This show, which consists of rarely seen works from 1970-2006, follows an earlier
exhibition of the artist’s “cartoons” and serves as a retrospective of the artist’s drawings.
The palpable feeling of distance and Katz’s sharp line in his works on canvas are already fully developed in his
subtle drawings: “At first, it may seem surprising that the painter who exposes the eye to emptiness and attaches
importance to skin and demarcation prepares his pictures in the manner of the old masters. That goes against the
basic notion of Pop and media art” (Werner Spies).
Alex Katz does not consider his drawings preparatory sketches for paintings. Rather, when the artist starts to
realize a drawing, long before oil touches canvas, he already has a very precise idea of the picture in his mind’s
eye.
Carter Ratcliff once aptly called his drawings, “paintings in black and white,” a statement he explains in an
essay written on the occasion of the Alex Katz Drawing Retrospective at the Munson-Williams-Proctor Institute in
Ithaca, NY in 1991:
“Katz does not wander through the world with a sketchbook in hand, waiting for some object or effect of
light to catch his attention. First he decides to paint a picture, then he makes a few drawings specifically for
that work [...]. The casual look of the line in drawings [...] shouldn’t lead us to assume that, in this early
stage in the process, Katz is idly playing about, waiting for some large purpose to formulate itself. Before
he picks up his pencil, he has a good idea of what he wants to do.”
Alex Katz was born in 1927 in Brooklyn, New York. From 1946 to 1950 he studied painting first at Cooper Union
in New York and then at the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture in Maine. Although Katz belongs to the
Pop generation of Andy Warhol, Robert Rauschenberg, and Jasper Johns, his paintings were not given
international exposure until the 1970s. Since the eighties, Katz has been the protagonist of Cool Painting,
achieving global influence and becoming a virtual father figure for a generation of painters who are now between
thirty and forty. A 1997 exhibition in Zurich and Hamburg called “Birth of Cool” demonstrated how the musical
‘coolness’ of post-war American jazz by Stan Getz or Miles Davis inspired a new style of American painting.
With
his figurative pictures, Alex Katz was always a crossover artist between abstraction and realism. His paintings
were figurative at a time when the collective American art scene had turned away from representational art. In
those days, Katz confronted the painters who insisted on an impulsive, individual style or, in the other instance, on
presenting works whose representative content had been reduced to barely perceptible nuances. Katz himself
has said he wanted to defend himself against Abstract Expressionism and the violent self-projection of artists like
Jackson Pollock: “Without further ado, the young painter picks up the threads of America’s usable past, of
Georgia O’Keeffe, Fairfield Porter, Ralston Crawford, and Edward Hopper” (Werner Spies).
For futher information, please contact Victoire de Pourthalès, victoire@ropac.net (+33 (0)1 42 72 99 00)
Opening 12 january 2008
Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac
7, rue Debelleyme, Paris
Free Admission