Monique van Genderen
March 25 - April 21, 2011
MONIQUE VAN GENDEREN - The Gentle Art of Making Enemies
Galerie Michael Janssen, Berlin
March 26 - April 21, 2011
Galerie Michael Janssen is pleased to announce its second solo exhibition by L.A.-based artist Monique van Genderen.
Entitled
The Gentle Art of Making Enemies the exhibition alludes to the book of
the same name by James Abbot McNeill Whistler. First published in 1892
it is an account of personal revenges between Whistler and the art
critic John Ruskin who criticized Whistler‘s painting Nocturne in Black
and Gold, exhibited in the Grosvenor Gallery in London in 1877, as
„unfinished“ and as „a pot of paint flung in the public‘s eye“. Whistler
was incensed with the criticism and initiated a libel case against
Ruskin. While the text is a narrative about the development of abstract
painting, it also explores the relationship between artist and viewer
and their expectations and desires for imparting unfixed ideas.
In
her work van Genderen explores elements of narrative, illusion and
figuration within abstraction by allowing the surface and material to
narrate the picture plane rather than a subject. If her paintings recall
Matisse, Emerson Woelffer and Helen Frankenthaler‘s Color Field
paintings then she is attracted to combining those elements with
concerns of today’s painting.
The paintings on view in the first
part of the exhibition all have exactly the same dimension: 6 feet high
and 4 feet wide (approx. 183 X 122 cm); a rather unusual dimension for
paintings that appeals to the spectator‘s body as well as the eye and
that heightens the physiological experience of viewing. Unlike her
previous works, the paintings in this exhibition are made on canvas
rather than on smooth wood panels. Without relying as much on the
alchemy of paint pooling to form loosely controlled shapes they now
explore the role of improvisation through compositional cropping. As
with the earlier works color continues to be a factor that attempts to
attract and repel at the same time.
Also on view is a series of
smaller clay paintings in which van Genderen uses fired clay and glaze
to make lyrical abstractions. Van Genderen’s work has always presented
materials in the form of a narrative; vinyl stood in for paint, enamel
for watercolor, and now clay for canvas. Throughout all the works there
is a mixture of materials varying between the organic (raw pigments) and
the industrial (shiny enamels). The surface of the clay paintings on
view has an imprint of canvas, which makes one think they were made on
canvas. They allude to her installation works in which the stretcher bar
and frame are deconstructed. In them playfulness and the promiscuous
intermingling of art and craft, silliness and seriousness, design and
décor predominates making them an interaction of painting and sculpture.
Monique van Genderen was born in Vancouver, Canada. Lives
and works in Los Angeles. Solo exhibitions (selection): 2008: Galerie
Michael Janssen, Berlin. 2006: Hammer Museum, Los Angeles; Savannah
College of Art and Design, Atlanta. 2005: Wexner Center for the Arts,
Columbus; Group exhibitions (selection): 2011: ACME Gallery, Los
Angeles, CA. 2010: Kunstmuseum St. Gallen, Switzerland.



























