A. R. Penck: Leo Koenig, Inc.A. R. Penck Ralf Winkler, alias A.R. Penck (born 5 October 1939) is a German painter, printmaker and sculptor. He was born in Dresden, East Germany, and studied together with a group of other neo-expressionist painters in Dresden. was born in Dresden in 1939 and lived there until 1980, when he emigrated to the capitalist side of the Iron Curtain Iron Curtain Political, military, and ideological barrier erected by the Soviet Union after World War II to seal off itself and its dependent eastern European allies from open contact with the West and other noncommunist areas. . As a young man, in an environment in which any art outside the socialist realist mold was liable to be dubbed subversive, he made paintings whose abstract imagery was meant to render political and existential realities legible. In 1968, he coined the term Standart to denote "a method of making information products," as he put it in a 1971 statement. Standart was "a production of the brain, made with the purpose of achieving a total perception of its visual information content, and thus affording the possibility of imitation.... Art thus acquires an explicitly rational function." This makes him sound more like a GDR GDR See Global Depositary Receipt (GDR). scientist than the proto-Neue Wilde primitivist that, in the '80s, he was often perceived to be. His sensibility actually combines elements of both, as a trio of shows this past spring and summer (solos at Mitchell-Innes & Nash and Leo Leo, in astronomy Leo [Lat.,=the lion], northern constellation lying S of Ursa Major and on the ecliptic (apparent path of the sun through the heavens) between Cancer and Virgo; it is one of the constellations of the zodiac. Koenig, Inc., and Gladstone Gallery's group exhibition "Derecon-struction," where Penck showed a suite of sculptures) made apparent. The Koenig show, with just seven paintings, was a lucid precis of his oeuvre. The earliest work in the exhibition was a medium-size untitled 1966 oil painting on a wool blanket depicting a male figure whose arms grow straight from his cartoonishly round head. Painted with a minimum of finesse in sickly pinkish tones, the work is an unusually abject and naturalistic rendering of a motif that had become standard for Penck--the abstracted male figure, a symbol of individual autonomy, but of vulnerability as well. In the second-oldest work in the show, Untitled (Standart), 1970, there's been a radical change--the painting is much larger, and although the male figure appears again, now he's merely an outline traced in black jots, floating against a gunmetal-gray background: flesh reduced to bare schematics. In the four years between the creation of these two paintings, Penck's vision of Standart, which he thought of as a "weapon" in the face of the upheavals and crackdowns that roiled the Eastern Bloc During the Cold War, the term Eastern Bloc (or Soviet Bloc) was used to refer to the Soviet Union and its allies in Central and Eastern Europe (Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, East Germany, Hungary, Poland, Romania, and—until the early 1960s—Albania). in the late '60s, had crystallized crys·tal·lize also crys·tal·ize v. crys·tal·lized also crys·tal·ized, crys·tal·liz·ing also crys·tal·iz·ing, crys·tal·liz·es also crys·tal·iz·es v.tr. 1. . Two other works from the '70s show Penck alternately refining his evolving pictorial system (as in the oversize o·ver·size n. 1. A size that is larger than usual. 2. An oversize article or object. adj. o·ver·size also o·ver·sized Larger in size than usual or necessary. Adj. 1. Nachtgeistertotenvogeltanz [Night Ghost Death Bird Dance], 1971) and departing from it: Der Wahnsinn der Vergangenheit ist Irreparabel (The Madness of the Past Is Irreparable), 1977, is an almost psychotically busy picture of a woman in bed, the space around her a wild montage of imagery; the work suggests a despairing slide back toward naturalism, even as that very despair creates a frenzied dynamism. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Finally, in three monumental works from the '80s--all flat, teeming teem 1 v. teemed, teem·ing, teems v.intr. 1. To be full of things; abound or swarm: A drop of water teems with microorganisms. 2. arrays of graphic and glyphic glyph n. 1. Architecture A vertical groove, especially in a Doric column or frieze. 2. A symbolic figure that is usually engraved or incised. 3. forms at various scales--Penck's style reaches a kind of apotheosis apotheosis (əpŏth'ēō`sĭs), the act of raising a person who has died to the rank of a god. Historically, it was most important during the later Roman Empire. . The black-on-white Der Damon, 1982, features a menacing, winged humanoid figure, a totem pole, stick figures, a dancing woman, a bird, a triangle, circles, and squares. The central element of Am Fluss (Hypothesis 1), 1982, also black and white (though here the black is the ground), is a figure whose curves are echoed by the serpentine forms around it. And in TSKrie VI, 1984, bright, unmixed color has been added to the stark black and white, and the composition is a matrix of concentric circles, dabs of paint, letters, arrows, and female figures. There is no ground at all, just a thicket of marks that draw the eye in and send the gaze off on ever-branching paths. Penck may never have fully achieved his early goal, which was to come up with a kind of visual Esperanto, but in his search for a universal pictorial language, he created paintings that have an energy that needs no translation. |
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