Visualizzazione post con etichetta Richard L. Feigen. Mostra tutti i post
Visualizzazione post con etichetta Richard L. Feigen. Mostra tutti i post

mercoledì 17 ottobre 2018

Compleanno dell'artista americano Ray Johnson, anticipatore della Pop Art e della Mail Art.





91 anni fa, il 16 ottobre del 1927,  nasceva a Detroi, un artista chiave della Pop Art   e uno dei padri fondatori della Mail Art.




I have simply had to accept that out of a life necessity I have written a lot of letters, and given away a lot of material and information, and it has been my compulsion. And as I have done this, it has become historical. It’s my resume, it’s my biography, it’s my history, it’s my life.  (Ray Johnson)




La Mail Art è nata  più di 50 anni fa, nel 1962, da quando l'artista americano Ray Johnson, fondò la “New York Corrispondance School of Art” occasionalmente in contemporanea con il movimento “ Fluxus”  del lituano-americano George Maciunas (1961)  e la  Pop Art di Leo Castelli a New York (1962). Una sorta di scuola d’arte per corrispondenza nella quale gli elaborati grafici con l’inserimento di timbri e collage venivano per la prima volta spediti per posta a conoscenti e persino ignari destinatari, dando  completa autonomia alla comunicazione e rendendo questo nuovo modo di espressione totalmente libero e al di fuori di qualsiasi schema imposto e prefissato dal potere culturale e di conseguenza dal mercato ufficiale dell’arte.  Rimane uno dei personaggi più originali  nel panorama degli anni 60’ in poi.





  
















Biografia/ Ray Johnson era un artista americano noto per la sua pratica innovativa di Correspondence Art. Una pratica basata su collage, il suo lavoro combina fotografia, disegno, performance e testo su distanze geografiche, attraverso la spedizione della posta. I progetti di Johnson includevano prestazioni concettualmente elaborate che si occupavano di relazioni interpersonali e disordini psichici. "sono interessato a cose e cose che si disintegrano o si disgregano, cose che crescono o hanno aggiunte, cose che nascono da cose e processi del modo in cui le cose mi accadono realmente", ha detto l'artista. Nato il 16 ottobre 1927 a Detroit, nel Michigan, i suoi primi anni di vita comprendevano lezioni sporadiche al Detroit Art Institute e un'estate alla Ox-Bow School di Saugatuck, nel Michigan. Nel 1945, Johnson lasciò Detroit per frequentare il progressivo Black Mountain College in North Carolina. Durante i suoi tre anni nel programma, ha studiato con un certo numero di artisti, tra cui Josef Albers, Jacob Lawrence, John Cage e Willem de Kooning. Trasferitosi a New York nel 1949, Johnson stringe amicizia tra Robert Rauschenberg e Jasper Johns, sviluppando una forma idiosincratica di Pop Art. Nei decenni successivi, Johnson divenne sempre più impegnato in performance e filosofia Zen, fondendo assieme  la pratica artistica con la vita. Il 13 gennaio 1995 Johnson si suicidò, gettandosi da un ponte a Sag Harbor, New York, poi nuotando in mare e annegando. Nel 2002, un documentario sulla vita dell'artista chiamato How to Draw a Bunny,  ci fa capire il suo lavoro di ricerca. Oggi, le sue opere si trovano nelle collezioni della National Gallery of Art di Washington, D.C., del Museum of Modern Art di New York, del Walker Art Center di Minneapolis e del Los Angeles County Museum of Art.  In questi ultimi anni tutto il suo lavoro sperimentale è stato rivalutato dalla critica come anticipatore persino della Pop Art americana.



Opere:   Visit: Ray Johnson Estate.

 


 

The Video: The Ray Johnson Sampler

by Nicholas Maravell

 

Durata del video 1:56:51  

sabato 14 gennaio 2017

RICHARD L. FEIGEN / The Human Image: From Velázquez to Viola


 





  


Please Join Us celebrating The Human Image: From Velázquez to Viola on Wednesday, January 25th from 5-8PM

Please join us on Wednesday, January 25th
from 5-8PM
for a reception celebrating 



            The Human Image: From Velázquez to Viola reveals the ways in which artists throughout history 
created    distinctive modes of portraiture to inspire, entertain, communicate, and challenge us. 


The exhibition includes
 portraits by Diego Velázquez, Hendrick Goltzius, Hyachinthe

Rigaud, Louis Gauffier, Thomas Lawrence, George Romney, Jonathan Budington and
Thomas Eakins,  alongside  Ary  Scheffer, Adolph Menzel, Édouard Manet, Mary
Cassatt, Pablo Picasso, Max Beckmann,  Marc Chagall, Joseph Cornell, and Jean Dubuffet,
leading up to Chuck Close, Ray Johnson, Andy  Warhol, Robert Mapplethorpe,  Benny
Andrews, George Condo, Carrie Mae Weems, Cindy Sherman,  Peter Saul, Elizabeth
Peyton,  and Bill Viola.



  

Hours
Monday through Friday, 10-6
Extended Hours: Saturday, January 21, 11-5
Reception: Wednesday January 25, 5-8

34 East 69th Street New York, NY 10021      Telephone: 212-628-0700      Fax: 212-249-4574      info@rlfeigen.com

domenica 11 gennaio 2015

Ray Johnson/ New York Times



Randy Kennedy's New York Times Article on Ray Johnson is Now Online
Ray Johnson's Art World
On view through January 16
Open tomorrow, January 10, 11-5









Image



Randy Kennedy's New York Times article Always on His Own Terms: Ray Johnson Defies Categories 20 Years After His Death is now online (text below). The article will appear in the Arts & Leisure section of the paper this Sunday, January 11.

Ray Johnson's Art World is on view at Richard L. Feigen & Co. through January 16.

Hours:
Saturday, January 10, 11-5
Monday-Friday, 10-6

ALWAYS ON HIS OWN TERMS
Ray Johnson Defies Categories 20 Years After His Death

By Randy Kennedy, The New York Times
January 8, 2015

Twenty years ago next week, the artist Ray Johnson jumped off a low bridge in Sag Harbor, N.Y., and backstroked placidly out to sea. Two teenage girls saw him plunge into the frigid water and tried to alert the police, but when they found the station closed they went to see a movie instead, a detail many of Mr. Johnson’s friends said would have delighted him.

Why he took his life at the age of 67 — when he was healthy, had money in the bank for the first time and was one of the most revered underground artists of the last half of the 20th century — is a question none of those friends have been able to answer. (The poet Diane di Prima wrote angrily: “I can’t imagine what you thought you were doing/what was the point of jumping off that bridge/after so many years of playing it cool.”) But in many ways Mr. Johnson conducted his death exactly as he had conducted his life and his work — enigmatically, defiantly on his own terms and with an intense privacy that somehow coexisted with a compulsively public persona.

Mr. Johnson heralded several art movements, almost simultaneously. He was making work that looked like Pop in the 1950s, years before his friend and sometime rival Andy Warhol did. He was a performance artist before there was a term for such a thing. He mined ground later occupied by Conceptual art (whose pretensions he loved to razz: “Oh dat consept art,” says a figure in one of his collages.) And he was the father of mail art, spreading his collages and Delphic text works through a vast web of fellow artists, friends and complete strangers, making him a one-man social-media platform for a pre-Internet age.

But every time mainstream recognition approached, Mr. Johnson — who lived as frugally as a monk and played the art world’s holy fool — seemed to dance away. Courted in the 1990s by the pinnacle of commercial acceptance, the Gagosian Gallery, he turned even that courtship into farce by demanding a million dollars each for collages then selling in the four-figure range; they’ve since advanced only into five figures.

“He was a guerrilla fighter against materialism and fame, and in a sense he’s still fighting today,” said Frances F. L. Beatty, president of Richard L. Feigen & Co., the gallery that represents Mr. Johnson’s estate.

But the art world may be finally starting to conquer Mr. Johnson’s will to resist it. A spate of books, exhibitions and museum acquisitions has come along in recent months, as his work has been discovered, yet again, by a generation of younger artists, like Matt Connors, Hanna Liden, Adam McEwen and Harmony Korine. This time, as money and power loom ever more powerfully in art circles, it seems to be Mr. Johnson’s role as a heroic-comic Bartleby that makes him particularly attractive to younger artists. But the shape-shifting ways in which he operated outside art’s normal channels — through the post office, street performances and artist’s books — also resonate for 21st-century artists whose work fits uneasily into the conventions of museums and galleries.

Continue reading the main story
Performa, the performance-art biennial, is organizing a tribute to Mr. Johnson for its 2015 iteration, which takes place in November. One aspect will be the dissemination — through ads, mailings and websites — of Johnson material, like a silhouette of his profile that he mailed out during his lifetime and asked people to alter and send on. The idea, said RoseLee Goldberg, Performa’s founder and director, is to stimulate a similar kind of free-form exchange now, online, on paper, and through other means, with Mr. Johnson as presiding spirit.

“We want to start it very early, so it will have time to grow extra arms and legs and heads,” she said.

As correspondent and collagist, Mr. Johnson was manically prolific. Even now, bins, binders and file folders full of unseen and largely unstudied material reside in closets — and an unused bathroom — at the East 69th Street townhouse of the Feigen gallery, “the Ali Baba’s cave of Ray’s archive,” as Ms. Beatty calls it. (Some of that work is on display in a show at the gallery through Jan. 16, “Ray Johnson’s Art World.”)

Waiting recently for a visit from curators from the Metropolitan Museum of Art, who were interested in seeing some Johnson works for acquisition, Ms. Beatty flipped on a closet light to show floor-to-ceiling stacks of light-blue archival boxes.

“You could happily, as far as I’m concerned, spend the rest of your life right in here,” she said. (A small army of doctoral students and scholars is indeed at work now sorting through his vast output.)

Raised in a working-class family in Detroit, Mr. Johnson hit the ground running as an artist before he was out of his teens. In 1945, he ended up at Black Mountain College, the Modernist hothouse near Asheville, N.C., where he studied with Joseph Albers and Robert Motherwell and began friendships with John Cage, Jasper Johns and the sculptor Richard Lippold, with whom he was romantically involved for many years.

After moving to New York and working as a studio assistant to the painter Ad Reinhardt, he began making works that he called “moticos” — possibly an anagram of the word “osmotic” — filled to overflowing with the pop-culture imagery from magazines, advertising and television that was starting to saturate society. Elvis Presley and James Dean surfaced repeatedly, like twin deities, and Mr. Johnson often took this work to the streets, displaying it on sidewalks and in Grand Central Terminal to generally perplexed passers-by.

“Some people just didn’t get it, and other people like me thought he was an absolute genius,” said the painter James Rosenquist, with whom Mr. Johnson corresponded for years, often asking him to forward mailed artworks on to Willem de Kooning.

“Sometimes I did what he asked and sometimes I just couldn’t part with them,” Mr. Rosenquist said, adding: “I really miss him because I accumulate all these strange things that I’d like to mail him, but I can’t because he’s not there.”

Continue reading the main storyContinue reading the main storyContinue reading the main story
Influenced by ideas of chance and Zen Buddhism, Mr. Johnson came to develop a hieroglyphic-like language in which image and word melted into each other, a language so complex it cried out not for curators but military code-breakers.

William S. Wilson, one of Mr. Johnson’s closest friends and a leading scholar of his work, recalled the almost religious gravity with which Mr. Johnson viewed not only making art but also putting it into the world. Mr. Wilson once drove Mr. Johnson to see the publisher Harry Abrams, who was interested in buying work. Mr. Johnson emerged from Mr. Abrams’s office in a fury with his briefcase of collages, Mr. Wilson said, “and flung himself on my lap crying because Abrams had asked him to throw in a 13th collage for free if he bought a dozen, as if Ray was selling eggs.”

Of course, such a stance meant that developing a market for Mr. Johnson’s work during his lifetime was next to impossible, and in many ways his critical stature still suffers because of this. “He kind of landed by default in the book and ephemera world, and to a large extent that’s really where his work has been living,” said Brendan Dugan, owner of the NoHo bookstore and gallery Karma, which organized an exhibition of late Johnson work last fall.

Mr. Dugan said he had been drawn to Mr. Johnson in part because of his avid following among younger, punk-influenced artists but also those whose work seems to have little affinity with Mr. Johnson’s, like Mr. Connors, an abstract painter who is featured in “The Forever Now: Contemporary Painting in an Atemporal World” on view now at the Museum of Modern Art.

In an email, Mr. Connors said: “I am always very excited by artists who create their own very specific codes, languages and grammars. He’s speaking his own language and talking to and about specific people, but he also loves to share it with you.” The effect is “kind of like a queer and gossipy downtown Joseph Beuys.”

For the show at Karma, Mr. Dugan was allowed to pore over reams of paper works in the Feigen archive, made by Mr. Johnson mostly in the last decade of his life, “and what I saw was a total discovery to me, because a lot of it was very raw and very punk,” he said. “Here was this guy in his 60s, and he’s still up to it, to the very end, pulling in new material from the culture and making this very weird stuff that feels very contemporary now.”

Ms. Beatty, who struggled for years to get Mr. Johnson to agree to a major exhibition at the Feigen gallery, remembered that he called her three days before he died. “And he said, ‘Listen, Frances, I’m planning to do something big and after that, you’ll finally be able to do your show.’ And I had no idea what he was talking about, but I thought maybe he was actually giving in, after playing cat and mouse for so long.

“Well, of course, little did I know, and that’s how it always was with Ray — how little did we know,” Ms. Beatty said, adding, “It was a lived-for-art life, 100 percent, all the way to the end.”