“I want to paint in the
present tense.”
Alex Katz
In his essay The Art of Alex Katz the Telegraph Newspaper’s
Martin Gayford said of Katz “He is to
designer shades what Claude Monet was to garden ponds.” An opinion
underscored by the Nassau County Museum’s director, Karl
E. Willers, who in a catalogue essay, described Katz’s style as “suave,
sophisticated, polished, refined, cultured, stylish.”
Except for
their lack of narrative and a search for his own voice in relation to what had
gone before Katz’s works could be classified as illustrations rather than fine
art. But as he told The Brooklyn
Rail in a conversation with David sale “There are some things other
people painted very well and they don’t have to be painted over again by me.
Matisse’s interiors, Picasso’s still lifes, Picasso’s solid form. They’ve all
been done. And one thing I don’t want to do is things already done. As for
particular subject matter, I don’t like narratives, basically.”
With a mix of
figurative and land/cityscape works to his credit, Katz divides his time exclusively
between New York City and the Maine countryside maintaining a style that does
both genres justice. As he told the Brooklyn
Rail in a 2009 interview “I think you have to be adaptable to your
surroundings. It’s a way to step outside of yourself, which can be very
generative. Whatever I do in my paintings has to do with a good deal of my time
looking at everything every day. I look at a lot of other artists’ works—young
and old. I even like looking at bad art because it can be more interesting than
boring art. Maybe spending every summer in Maine with Ada, where I paint from
nature, gives me fresh insight when I come back to the city. It’s a perfect
balance for me. The bottom line about the way I think of style is that it has
sustaining power.”
Katz builds his
large, often billboard sized, paintings from quickly executed small initial
paintings. As he says “I would paint a little painting from the little
paintings. From there I would paint at 4 × 6 feet, and if it looked right, I
would move up to 5 × 7 feet. And if I felt I had it, I then go right up to the
big ones.”
The initial
land and cityscapes are completed in 15 minutes whereas the initial sitting for
a portrait would be an hour. And with over 200 renderings, his wife, Ada, is a favored
subject. “She’s basically an American beauty. Ada for me is like Dora Maar to
Picasso. But Ada has better shoulders, and could easily be Miss America. I was
interested in Miss America because it’s an icon in popular culture, so she just
fits right in,” Katz has said.
A self titled
exhibition of Alex Katz’s work is currently on show at Gavin Brown’s Enterprise’s
Greenwich Street gallery in New York until the 13th of June.
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