NEW YORK, NY.- Petzel Gallery is presenting Pharmaceutria, a presentation of paintings by Ross Bleckner. On view through June 15, this exhibition of recent works marks the artists first solo show in New York City in five years and his debut at Petzels Chelsea location.
For Pharmaceutria (sorceress in Latin), Bleckner, as if an alchemist, conjures a painterly, prescient response to current moods and times. Much as the artists Cell Paintings were a political, conscious-raising call-to-action during the 1990s AIDS epidemic, the works included in Pharmaceutria are an antagonistic, visual retort to the divisive 2016 elections.
Each of Pharmaceutrias large-scale paintings, bearing brooding titles such as Burn Painting (Out of Head), 2015; When You Think You Have Nothing, 2019; Your Map of This Place, 2019; Flag, 2019; and Burn Painting (2050: Not My Future), 2016, has been destroyed and then brought back to life, Bleckner says. I torch them literally but organically. When the fire hits the paint, it reacts. Its a process of construction and reconstruction. A rebirth.
The Pharmaceutria series, completed within the last three years, signals a return to form for Bleckner, one of contemporary arts Masters. The show features the artists signature dark, hypnotic Monet and El Greco-inspired canvases and investigates themes of anxiety, loss, memory and change while proposing, through seductive images of pulsating beauty and emotional urgency, an idea of personal and social healing, whether partial or complete.
Ross Bleckner was born in New York City and grew up in Hewlett, NY. He received a Bachelor of Arts from New York University in 1971, a Master of Fine Arts from Cal Arts in 1973, and he has taught at many of the nations most prestigious universities. During his career, Bleckner has exhibited throughout the United States, and Internationally, at venues such as SFMoMA, the ICA Philadelphia, Kunsthalle Zuriche, Moderna Museet in Stockholm, among others. In 1995, the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York held a major retrospective of his works. Works by Bleckner are also held in public collections throughout the globe, including MoMA, MoCA, and the Whitney Museum of American Art.