Masters of paint, time and intimacy

The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Friday, July 5, 2024


Masters of paint, time and intimacy
Marlborough. Frieze Masters, 2019. Installation View. Photo: Luke Walker.

by Nina Siegal



LONDON (NYT NEWS SERVICE ).- Contemporary artist Alex Katz has painted more than 250 portraits of his wife, Ada. Even though Alex is 92 years old and Ada is 91, he never tires of her as a subject.

“I made four this summer,” he said in a telephone interview recently from his studio in New York. “When we initially started with it, she was much more generic looking. She was a pretty girl. As she got older, she became like an icon.”

The first time Alex painted Ada was in 1957, the year they met, and that painting, “Ada,” is in the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s collection.

He still recalls exactly what she was wearing the evening they met: “a beige sweater and a gray skirt, and her hair was pulled back — very severe looking.” He said: “She smiled, and I’ve never seen anything like it. It was fantastic.”

After that, he painted her frequently; sometimes he has painted multiple images of her in the same painting. “She turned out to be the perfect model,” he said. “She was beautiful, and her parents had taken her to a lot of movies; all her movements came out of the movies. She doesn’t make a bad gesture.”

“Ada Smiling,” a Katz painting from 1993, is one of more than a dozen that will be featured in the Marlborough Gallery’s special presentation at Frieze Masters this year, which will focus on the complex relationships between some of contemporary art’s leading portraitists — Lucian Freud, Alice Neel and Celia Paul, among others — and their sitters.

The thematic show, in which all of the works are for sale, will explore how very intimate model-artist relationships, often between family members or close friends, can vary significantly, with dramatically different results.

Two of the portraits are by German-British painter Frank Auerbach, who makes abstracted figurative paintings in thick paints; they are composed over a long period of time and require famously grueling sittings. He has sitters six nights a week at his Camden Town studio in London, including his son, Jake, and a friend, art critic William Feaver.

Jake, 61, has been sitting for his father since he was 17 years old, he said, every Monday for two hours. “It’s not as if it’s a painting every week,” he explained. “It can take up to two years to make a painting. These things take a long time. At the end of each sitting if the thing doesn’t have a potential to be finished, all the paint gets scraped off.”

Feaver sits every Tuesday night, also for two hours. “One is slightly like a monkey in a cage,” he said, of sitting still while being painted. “One moves around, and the person that is examining you gets some sense of animation. One isn’t a dummy sitting there. He wants to get something fresh each week. Every week, he hopes that it will be done in one week, and of course it never is.”

He estimates that Frank Auerbach produces two to three portraits of him each year. Jake Auerbach said that it could sometimes take up to two years for his father to produce a single painting of him.

“Even if you scrape the paint off,” he said, “there’s always a ghost of the previous image, and even just the ghosts of the previous image in his head.” His father’s resulting portrait, he explained, is “not an aggregate of many years of paint. The paint for the final portrait will all have been applied in the final sitting.”

Feaver said he did not think of the final work as a portrait of him but simply as “a painting of a person.” “There’s curiously no ego involved at all — neither Frank’s nor mine — there’s no desire to prettify it, no pressure to produce a likeness,” he said. “It’s the highest form of portraiture — one human being facing another human being and making something of that person.”

Alex Katz works in a completely different way. He catches a glimpse of Ada, then decides to try to make an image of her at that particular moment.

“Once I saw her in the elevator; she was wearing a red coat and the red hat, and she had black hair,” he said. “It went click. It hit on the eye. You see the image and say, ‘That’s the painting.’ Then you go about trying to create it.”

Katz will ask his wife to sit for a sketch, which he said takes no more than an hour and a half. From that, he works on the painting, while she is no longer in the studio with him.

His primary interest, he said, is capturing her surface-level appearance.

“I try to eliminate all narrative content,” he said. “Some people think they are empty and cold, or heartless. Narrative slows down the image; my idea is that there is no today, there is no yesterday, there is only now. Eternity exists only exists in total consciousness, the sensation of appearance. That’s what makes them timeless.”


© 2019 The New York Times Company





Restoration And Renovation Paul | Celia (1959 ) London (England) Metropolitan Museum Of Art Great Britain Frieze Art Fair Freud | Lucian Entertainment Art Katz | Alex (1927 ) Marlborough Gallery Museums Neel | Alice Auerbach | Frank Arts Germany Culture (Arts) |





Today's News

October 4, 2019

£9.9 million chimp parliament painting smashes Banksy record

If you have $30 million, you could have a Botticelli

UK particle accelerator to reveal secrets of 2,000-year-old papyrus

Rediscovered masterpiece by Andrea Mantegna to highlight Sotheby's Masters Week in NYC

Masters of paint, time and intimacy

J. Paul Getty Museum acquires two Italian masterpieces

Huguette Caland, artist who celebrated freedom in art and life, dies at 88

Freeman's to offer the collection of Philadelphia Pop Art collector Robert J. Morrison

Hindman to offer significant works by A.R. Mitchell in Arts of the American West Auction

Musée national Picasso-Paris exhibits Picasso's "magic paintings"

For Frieze, there's no place like London

Sterling shines alongside classic and contemporary design in Rago's October Remix Auctions

Wealth keeps museums alive, and galvanizes activists too

Exhibition at La Mama Galleria explores the pain shared by women who have endured domestic violence

The Morgan Library & Museum announces plans for a new garden

Phillips announces highlights from the October Editions Auction in New York

Museum of London acquires extremely rare plate that belonged to Samuel Pepys

Doyle Auctioneers & Appraisers announces expansion in Florida

Deborah Marrow, who led the Getty Foundation for 30 years, passes away

Kapwani Kiwanga has more questions

World auction record for monumental Cragg sculpture at Bonhams Post-War & Contemporary Sale

Frieze Focus Stand Prize awarded to Proyectos Ultravioleta

Exhibition presents a series of paper sculptures and watercolours by British architect Nigel Coates

White Cube opens an exhibition of work by Dóra Maurer




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful