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Gerhard Richter: Forty Years of Painting
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![]() Abstraktes Bild (Abstract Picture), 1992 Oil on aluminum panel |
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![]() Klorolle (Toilet Paper) 1965, oil on canvas |
The work of German painter Gerhard Richter now commands the
highest prices of any living artist, but, even so, the body of his work presents a
formidable challenge to the viewer. It is at once deeply rooted in the painter's own life
history in troubled times (under a Nazi regime, under a Communist regime) and coolly aloof
in the representation of images from that history, as if unwilling or unable to make
judgements about it. He works in both representational and abstract modes which seem
connected only by his unquestionably masterful painterly skills. Somehow it is easier to
look at his paintings one at a time; viewing them all together creates a need to make some
sense of the full body of work which is not so easily accomplished.
The exhibition Gerhard Richter: Forty Years of Painting presents
just that opportunity as retrospectives are wont to do. With some 140 paintings ranging
from 1962 to the present, every phase of Richter's career is represented.
Curator Robert Storr refers to a "dialectic of found photos with
painted images" in which Richter engages. Many of these paintings are, indeed, based
on photos, and they have the look of somewhat faded photographic prints, in a
limited range of grays. But Richter, in these paintings, is not doing photo-realism
(though he does that in other works, e.g. Two Candles); he doesn't let the viewer
forget that this is a painting. The difference is in the larger scale and in the way
Richter shifts the image out of focus, producing a somewhat blurred effect, almost as if,
perhaps, the camera had moved or the hand slipped in the developing process. But these are
paintings, not photographs, and the virtuosity of the painter in creating these effects is
of the caliber that elicits the awed question, "How does he do that?"
The blurring has varying effects, from creating a rather romantic glow
around the banal image of a roll of toilet paper to somewhat ironically softening the
drab, institutional look of Administrative Building. The same look is
applied to portraits of his father and his uncle. The significance of these blurred
portraits is only understood in context. Richter's father embraced the Nazis and as a
result was prevented from continuing his career as a teacher after the war; the clownish
portrait has a sad, rather defeated aura to it. His uncle, on the other hand, is pictured
in his military uniform; he was killed early in the war.
Richter uses many images that are drawn from current events. But while
the historical context of a painting surely adds richness to its appreciation, the degree
of resonance generated in the viewer will dwindle significantly over time and distance
from those events unless the painting itself offers more universal meaning. While a
painting of planes dropping bombs offers an image that will surely elicit a response, how
many viewers in future generations will know whose planes are bombing whom and why?
Eight Student Nurses, a series of paintings based on yearbook
photos, again has the look of banality. When you learn that these were the victims of a
serial murderer, they take on a whole different cast. And the series on the
Baader-Meinhoff events, October 18, 1977, for which New York MOMA paid some $15
million, depends almost entirely on a knowledge of the German history of the time; for the
great many without that history, it is hard to see how those paintings will significantly
communicate more than a rather vague sense of foreboding. You don't have to know the
history of the Spanish Civil War to be profoundly moved by Picasso's Guernica
because Picasso directly expressed his passion. Richter subverts his feelings, as if he's
afraid they will fly out of control.
On the other hand, Richter's realistic portraits of his wife and
children are instantly accessible, extraordinarily executed, and, though cool, do radiate
a low-keyed affect. Lesende (1994) is from a photograph of his wife and has not
unjustly been described as Vermeer-like.
The large Townscape canvases and other works from the late
sixties put Richter's stamp on concurrent Op Art ideas. Close up, Townscape SL, with
its thickly laid on strokes of paint, appears completely abstracted; as you back off from
the painting it is transformed into a strong aerial cityscape. And Gray Streaks creates
an unmistakable moire effect. There are color chart pictures that suggest later
conceptual work, such as that of Sol Lewitt. There is a large variety of abstractions,
ranging from the gestural to the highly calculated, often created with heavy application
of pigment, scrapings, layerings. Richter has developed a technique of applying oil to
aluminum panels, utilizing a squeegee to achieve his desired effects, often sensually
beautiful. His color choices in the abstractions range from monotonic to bright acidic
colors reminiscent of the German Expressionists.
A major retrospective such as this one, particularly one originating at
NYMOMA, is somewhat daunting in the way it enshrines the work of the artist. Storr's
lengthy and interesting comments in the catalogue are part and parcel of that effect. For
the genenal public audience, though, the verdict may still be out. While some of the
individual works are unquestionably evocative and appealing, others are likely to generate
little more than shrugs. If the mastery of his medium is awe-inspiring, is is nonetheless
difficult to reconcile the wildly diverse range of styles into a coherent whole. The cool
and calculated stance that Richter takes is off-putting. While he surely has an element of
emotional input to his work along with its intellectual and technical deliberation, by and
large these paintings do not communicate on an emotion-to-emotion basis.
October 12, 2002 - Arthur Lazere