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Anton Henning: Christopher Grimes Gallery.


Aptly, if dramatically, titled "Tragedy, Sunburns sunburn /sun·burn/ (sun´bern) injury to the skin, with erythema, tenderness, and sometimes blistering, after excessive exposure to sunlight, produced by unfiltered ultraviolet rays.

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 & Still-lives," Anton Henning's second exhibit of paintings at Christopher Grimes Gallery meditated on the materiality and intensity of life. And while these images offer hints of vanitas, one often also finds in them a sense of indulgence in the present moment. Henning positions himself as an heir to all those whose work has displayed a flair for the lush and the strange, from the painters of the Baroque to Courbet, Manet, the post-Impressionists, Matisse, and more recently, the likes of Sigmar Polke, Eric Fischl, and David Salle. Borrowing style and reference promiscuously, Henning advances an approach to painting that is unapologetically figurative and evidences a real pleasure in the materials and processes employed.

It's not that the paintings shown, made during 2002-2004, are over-the-top or explicit. Rather, they simply seem at ease with the retinal, material, and intellectual pleasures they offer. Implying neither struggle nor casualness, they seem more the products of someone who has no difficulty getting into a groove. Henning seems comfortable in his own skin, delivering a loosely brushed self-portrait self-portrait: see portraiture. that includes a glimpse (over the subject's sunburnt shoulder) of a supernova sun. He accompanies this work with a separate canvas in which a sun burning in a blue sky is seen from a retina-frying, dead-on point of view. Henning turns up again, looking equal parts hedonist and old-fashioned romantic, in Blumenstilleben No. 184, 2004, in which he doubles the pleasure via two duplicated images of himself in sunglasses, smoking a Castro-worthy cigar and reclining buck naked beneath a sky as orange as his skin.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

In these doubled images, the male Venus/Olympia basks in a landscape that is anomalous or ambiguous. One isn't sure if the backgrounds are photographs or color-field painting color-field painting, abstract art movement that originated in the 1960s. Coming after the abstract expressionism of the 1950s, color-field painting represents a sharp change from the earlier movement. The production of the abstract expressionists involved a strong personal emotionalism, a painterly quality, and occasionally, as in the works of Willem de Kooning, elements of cubism., or if the dark, cloudy sky reveals a stormy sunset, the smoggy glow of oil fires, or the aftermath of an apocalypse. And it remains equally unclear whether the swirling lines beneath the figure represent the pattern of a beach blanket or the ridges and valleys of a dwarfed landscape. Stranger still is the way in which these twin nude self-portraits not only occur within the same painting but also are backdrops within it. Appearing to hang on a wall in an illusionistically rendered space, they drop away behind what appears to be an abstract sculpture based on a plantlike motif called a "hennling" (hence the painting's title, which translates as "flower still life") sitting on a table in the foreground.

Such combinations recur frequently in Henning's works, wherein instances of the broad quotation of disjunctive imagery and styles are handled not through layering and juxtaposition but rather via spatially logical if circumstantially unexpected arrangements. What appear to be monochrome nude pinups or photographs of interiors, or perhaps actual figures and rooms dramatically lit, drop away behind objects that range from familiar to abstracted to simply undefined. Occasionally, in nods to Guston and Magritte Magritte - A constraint language for interactive graphical layout by J. Gosling. It solves constraints using algebraic transformations.

["Algebraic Constraints", J. Gosling, PhD Thesis, TR CS-83-132, CMU, May 1983].
, the paintings picture canvases stacked up into still lifes or transformed into tabletops and floors. Delivering neither chaos nor the bizarre, Henning instead reshuffles rich imagery and allows one to get lost in the pleasure of trying to make sense of it all.

--CM
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Title Annotation:LOS ANGELES; paintings are a meditation on the materiality of life
Author:Miles, Christopher
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Critical Essay
Date:Mar 1, 2005
Words:532
Previous Article:Andrea Zittel: Regen Projects.(LOS ANGELES)(prototype for sculpture paired with slide show of artist's life and work)(Critical Essay)
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