“That’s the job of art: to undo the logic of the
world.”
Sean Scully
Sean Scully
For the Irish born abstract
painter Sean Scully the world
outside the studio is a major influence in his work.
As he told Blouin
Artinfo’s Scott Indriek “My abstraction has never been, let’s say, theory
based. It’s always been rather experiential. I’ve always used metaphors that
relate to things outside painting… I’m not one of these painters who just
refers to the history of abstract painting. I’ve always tried to have windows
to the world. It’s often associative.”
And one of those associations
is music. A musician himself, Scully owned a Blues club and played in a band in
London in the 1960’s before coming under the spell of visual artists Mark
Rothko and Bridgette Riley and taking up painting.
It is an influence, he told The
Irish Times that can be seen in his work. “I think that I make chords when
I paint, so I think you would be listening to the cello. It’s deep and it’s
resonant. A lot of people have compared me to Brahms – that slightly
melancholic sensuality that’s highly structured. Well, that describes my work
right there.”
Although being born in Ireland, Scully grew up in London and
now, as a US citizen, lives in New York, but is seriously considering opening a
studio in Berlin. As he explains “the city is kind
of shut, though it sells itself as the opposite. Welcome to the Big Apple! But
it’s already eaten. The problem for Manhattan in particular is that the rental
value of the space is so compressed that it squeezes out that sort of risk
taking and now you’ve got just powerhouse galleries that I wouldn’t want to
show in, you know Zwirner, Hauser & Wirth. They are monster galleries and
they seem to feed on artists. It reminds me of Goya’s painting of the Colossus
eating his own children. I wouldn’t want to be eaten by one of those galleries.
I show with Cheim & Read, it’s a nice little family affair.”
Such a move would be easy for
the nomadically inclined artist. As he explains “I’m essentially a European who
has migrated, so in a sense my work is like a fusion of American and European
influences: the American scale and compositional aggression or frankness, but
with a lot of European knowledge in it. And in that sense my position is
unique, because I’m bringing the information back and forth. When I’m in
Germany for example, I am seen as quite American. There’s a guy who’s going to
open the newly reformed Sprengel Museum in Hannover. And he’s hanging a big painting
of mine with Don Judd and Agnes Martin. So he sees me as American. But in New
York, the city of Jeff Koons, Ellsworth Kelly, and Wade Guyton, I would be seen
as quite European. I’m a fusion.”
But wherever he is located
the urge to work is a constant along with the need to re-examine what has gone
before. As he says “Recycling material. Intellectual and physical. I am recycling
these bands in my paintings, I’ve been doing it forever, once I stopped
painting figuratively. I started recycling, and rejigging, shape-shifting bands
and blocks and bars. Some people call them stripes, but I like the term bands because
I like rock ’n’ roll so much.”
A selection of Scully’s Landline series of works is current on
show at Dublin’s Kerlin
Gallery until the 29th of August.
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