Saturday Night Kiss
26 August - 7 October 2006
Zürich
Hauser & Wirth Zurich are delighted to present a solo exhibition by the American artist Mary Heilmann. On display is a selection of works on paper and prints dating from the years 1980-2006.
Mary Heilmann is considered one of the most influential abstract painters of her generation. Born and educated in California, she moved to New York in 1968, where she rubbed shoulders with many exponents of Minimalism and Pop Art. While her painting developed alongside these stylistic trends of the 1960s and 70s, it is not readily categorized in terms of a specific formal language. Rather, her oeuvre is highly original and the playful abstract images that she has created over the last three decades of her career are timeless.
At first sight, her works appear similar to the tradition of American abstract painting, seeming to follow the trend towards absolute reductionism. Her works are non-figurative and clearly informed by a geometric vocabulary. On closer inspection, however, Heilmann’s independence from such movements becomes apparent. Clearly visible brush strokes, a slight distortion of angular shapes, and spots and drips of paint in unexpected places, distance her from her contemporaries in a fashion that is superbly ironic. This year, in collaboration with Crown Point Press in San Francisco, Heilmann has produced aquatint etchings in glowing colours. These highlight a basic geometric grid as the foundation of the image, immediately tempering its severity with a bleeding upper edge - as in Valentine - or by ribs of dripping paint - as in Joaquin’s Close Out.
Heilmann's early move to New York coincided with her switch from sculpture to painting. Despite this physical move, her compositions continue to refer to the experiences of her childhood on the West Coast – and perhaps reflect a certain nostalgia for them - using abstract forms heightened by symbolic colour. They are infused with numerous associations. Heilmann still feels close to the beach culture of California, especially the surfing scene, and to the Beat Generation with which she identified in her youth. Both visually and in their titles, her pictures allude to encounters and experiences, historic events and daily occurrences, film and song titles, and simple objects from her immediate environment.
"Each of my paintings can be seen as an autobiographical marker, a cue, by which I evoke a moment from my past, or my projected future, each a charm to conjure a mental reality and to give it physical form."
Thus pictures such as 9th Wave (1988) and Whitewater (1991) testify to an enduring fascination of life lived near the ocean which she continues to do at a home on the eastern end of Long Island. The titles of both earlier works such as Save the Last Dance for Me (1979) and Tomorrow’s Parties (1979/1994) and more recent paintings like To Be Someone (2004) and Mariachi Static (2004) refer not only to specific pieces of music, but actually evoke the tunes in the viewer's ears. Although the compositions are primarily non-figurative, they are universal, vividly bringing to life the viewer's own associations with a world.
Mary Heilmann (born 1940) lives and works in New York. She has had solo exhibitions at the Secession in Vienna (2003), at the Camden Arts Centre in London (2001) and in the Kunstmuseum in St. Gallen (2000). She has also participated in major exhibitions such as 'Der zerbrochene Spiegel’ at the Vienna Kunsthalle (1993-94) and 'nuevas abstracciones’ at the Centro de Arte Reina Sofia in Madrid (1996). Her work is currently included in ‘Infinite Painting: Contemporary Painting and Global Realism’ at the Villa Manin in Italy.
In May 2007, Orange County Museum of Art in Newport Beach (CA) is mounting a survey show of her work which will be the first to include paintings, ceramics, furniture and works on paper. The show will travel to Houston (TX) and Columbus (OH) before arriving at the New Museum of Contemporary Art, New York in 2008.
The Diamond
1982
Rainbow Kachina
1982
Black Tile
1984
Kimono
2006
Neon Embrace
1980
Descent
1980
Descending
1982
The Fall
1982
Double Kiss
1986
Half Jack
2005
Cubist Wave
2005
Outside In
2006
Sunday Morning
1987
Saturday Night
1987
All Night Movie
1991
Charm
2004
Pentimento
1998
Undertow
2006
Clubchair 19
2004
Clubchair 28
2005
Influenced by 1960s counterculture, the free speech movement, and the surf ethos of her native California, Mary Heilmann ranks amongst the most influential abstract painters of her generation. Considered one of the preeminent contemporary Abstract painters, Heilmann’s practice overlays the analytical geometries of Minimalism with the spontaneous ethos of the Beat Generation, and are always distinguishable by their often unorthodox—always joyful—approach to color and form.
Raised in San Francisco and Los Angeles, Heilmann completed a degree in literature, before she studied ceramics at Berkeley. Only after moving to New York in 1968 did she begin to paint. While most artists at that time were experimenting with the concept of dematerialization and demanding that painting should avoid any references to experience outside the material presence of the work itself, Heilmann opted for painting, rebelling against the accepted rules. ‘Rather than following the decrees of modern, non-representational formalism, I started to understand that the essential decisions taken during the creative process were more and more related to content. The Modern movement was over…’
Since then, Heilmann has created compositions that evoke a variety of associations. Her work may be non-representational and based on an elementary, geometrical vocabulary—circles, squares, grids and stripes—but there is always something slightly eccentric, casual about them. The simplicity of the forms is played down by a deceptive form of nonchalance: the contours are not clearly defined. In some paintings, amorphous forms appear to melt into each other like liquid wax. Splashes of color can be discerned, sharp edges bleed for no apparent reason, and the ductus of the brushstrokes is always perceptible. Heilmann’s casual painting technique conceals a frequently complex structure that only gradually reveals itself to the viewer.
The Fact That It Amazes Me Does Not Mean I Relinquish It
13 September 2024 – 5 January 2025
Downtown Los Angeles
The Fact That It Amazes Me Does Not Mean I Relinquish It
13 September 2024 – 5 January 2025
Downtown Los Angeles
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