GUNTER UMBERG.MUSEUM LUDWIG Museum Ludwig, located in Cologne, Germany, houses a collection of modern art. It includes works from PopArt, Abstract and Surrealism, and has one of the largest Picasso collections in Europe. It also features many works by Andy Warhol and Roy Lichtenstein. How is color to be applied to a surface? Gunter Umberg, an artist living in Cologne, has been asking that question for thirty years now. In the process he has concentrated on a single color, black, with occasional forays into others. Until about 1978, Umberg mixed his pigment with damar Damar: see Dhamar, Yemen. resin before applying it layer by layer to a wood panel, sanding each layer before applying the next. To achieve even greater depth, he then changed his painting method. Today he brushes the dry pigment directly into a moist layer of damar previously applied to the panel, often mixing other colors into the base layers. His paintings prove that black and black are not the same thing. The way the color is applied to the canvas is what makes the paintings, and what accounts for the differences among them. Offered an exhibition at the Ludwig Museum, Umberg opted for a confrontation. From private collections in Cologne he selected individual works by other artists and presented them along with his own paintings. What do these works have in common? From an art-historical or art-theoretical point of view, nothing. And yet something unites them: Informed by experience and driven by the passion with which he devotes himself to the process of color not of the white race; - commonly meaning, esp. in the United States, of negro blood, pure or mixed. See also: Color application, Umberg examines this process and its results in the works of other artists. Andy Warhol's Red Race Riot, 1963, for example, is a mechanical reproduction of photographs taken from the newspaper. But Warhol covered the entire surface with red paint--the traces of the brush are clearly visible. Suddenly this figurative fig·u·ra·tive adj. 1. a. Based on or making use of figures of speech; metaphorical: figurative language. b. Containing many figures of speech; ornate. 2. painting becomes, by virtue of palpable brushstrokes, an abstract image that owes its intense effect to the particular application of paint. How would this image hold up, Umberg wondered, next to an abstract painting by Helmut Federle that exists solely in the effects of brushstrokes? In a traditional museum installation, these two paintings would never have the opportunity to meet. How does a body-print painting executed by Yves Klein Yves Klein (28 April 1928 - 6 June 1962) was a French artist and is considered an important figure in post-war European art. New York critics of Klein's time classify him as neo-Dada, but other critics, such as Thomas McEvilley in an essay submitted to Artforum in 1982, have since in 1960 relate to the color impressions by Bernard Frize made in the '80s? What happens when Robert Ryman's white paintings meet the colorful, baroque compositions of Jessica Stockholder? And how about Rosemarie Trockel's white cube, on which two gray hot plates are mounted? How is color applied here? There are many possible methods of color application, including soaking, which Umberg used in the early '70s when he made fragile, opaque paintings by dipping packing-paper squares in asphalt varnish varnish, homogeneous solution of gum or of natural or synthetic resins in oil (oil varnish) or in a volatile solvent (spirit varnish), which dries on exposure to air, forming a thin, hard, usually glossy film. . Can these hold up to Sigmar Polke's equally fragile-seeming grid painting or to Ingrid Calame's green patches Green Patches is a science fiction short story by Isaac Asimov. It was first published in the November 1950 issue of Galaxy Science Fiction under the title Misbegotten Missionary and reprinted under the present title in the 1969 collection on transparent paper, the form of which the artist took from a stain found on the street? The confrontations continue: Oskar Kokoschka's brushstrokes, unusually careless for the year 1918, and those of David Reed David Reed or Dave Reed may refer to:
tr.v. jux·ta·posed, jux·ta·pos·ing, jux·ta·pos·es To place side by side, especially for comparison or contrast. with Ellsworth Kelly's monochromatic monochromatic /mono·chro·mat·ic/ (-kro-mat´ik) 1. existing in or having only one color. 2. pertaining to or affected by monochromatic vision. 3. staining with only one dye at a time. Three Panels: Blue Yellow Red, 1966, which negates every thought of brushstrokes. Although Umberg proceeded in his selection with an eye to the problem of paint application, there is ultimately more at stake. It is about, as he put it, "the sensory impression which is the painting, does not convey anything, does not describe anything, and does not represent anything, except itself." It is about the sensual presence of each individual work. That i t directs our attention to this presence, which inheres in every artwork no matter how laden with content, is the merit of this unusual exhibition whose title is, fittingly, "Body of Painting." Noemi Smolik |
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