|
Goff + Rosenthal gallery is pleased to present a series of new paintings and works on paper by German artist Susanne Kühn. In her fourth New York exhibition of paintings, Susanne Kühn returns with four emotionally-charged canvasses and five watercolors that represent a change both in her approach to landscape and the palette she has worked with for her entire career. “My interest in landscape has not changed,” explains Kuhn, “I just shifted my focus to the transition from the landscape to architecture.” In this cycle of works Kuhn has drawn deeply from the Old Masters--the foundation of the new paintings both in terms of structure and content are Domenico Ghirlandaio, Hans Holbein and Fra Filippo Lippi and Albrecht Dürer.
|
|
2.
Scanning “Katja Melancholia” from left to right, the landscape undergoes a metamorphosis from a watercolor-sketch to Japanese woodcut to Dr. Seuss-like trees—all staples of Kuhn’s work to date. In the background of “Melanie Melancholia” is a stylized Italian pine landscape, while in the foreground the figure of Melanie crouches in a fantastical garden with artificial looking trees. In “Hannah 1482”, inspired by Ghirlandaio, the landscape refers to Kuhn’s home in the Black Forest.
“During my last travels to Italy I realized that the landscape dominant in Renaissance painting is still there, and that many of the painted houses and streets are also still there. So time has moved on, and now we can stand there in an almost-Renaissance landscape with all we bring with us: technological advancement, knowledge, fashion, Zeitgeist.”
|
Besides landscape and architecture, Kuhn’s paintings in this exhibition explore the theme of Melancholia. For Kuhn “Katja Melancholia” represents a kind of intellectual melancholia drawn, in part, from Durer’s famous etching. "Melanie Melancholia", on the other hand, represents an emotional state of melancholy inspired by a Lippi painting of a Madonna with child. Says Kuhn: “The heart-chair with rock-castle, the distant landscape in the back of the room and the strange mutated trees in the garden where she is sitting and thinking underline the emotional emptiness.”
1. Hannah-1482, 2007 Oil on Canvas 78.8 x 94.56 inches, 200 x 240 cms
2. Katja Melancholia, 2007 Oil on Canvas 86.68 x 126.08 inches (Total) 220 x 320 cms 220 x 160 cms (Each L/R panel)
3. Wanderung bei Sonne, 2007 Ink, Watercolor on paper 11.23 x 13.4 inches, 28.5 x 34 cms
3.
|