SHANGHAI.- Long Museum presents the largest solo exhibition by George Condo in Asia, The Picture Gallery. This ambitious presentation brings together more than 200 paintings, sculptures and drawings made throughout the artists career. Curated by Massimiliano Gioni and designed in collaboration with world-renowned architect Annabelle Selldorf, the exhibition focuses on some of the most important cycles and bodies of works that have defined Condos art since the late 1970s, when the artist was among the first to herald a critical return to painting after decades of conceptual art practices.
The Picture Gallery opens with a new cycle of paintings specifically realized for the Long Museum, which combine free gestural interventions with drawn figurative notations. Grouped under the title Blues Paintings, this new body of work plays with musical references ranging from blues music to free jazz, while also composing an elegiac atmosphere. Condo refers to these works as a lamentation for the return to the so-called new normal in the wake of the months of lockdown that followed the Covid-19 pandemic.
Blues Paintings stand in stark contrast with a selection of important early works, throughout which Condo depicts imaginary creatures, cartoon characters, and his legendary antipodular beings with the fastidiousness of an old master. Condos ability to bend traditional techniques to unexpected ends is also in full display in a massive salon-style installation featuring more than 30 portraits made over the last four decades. Combining an acute psychological insight with a maddening physiognomic imagination, Condos portraits seemingly compose a cast for a new theater of the absurd, mysteriously conflating comedy and tragedy.
In the cycle titled The American Wing, paintings and largescale silkscreens portray American junk food, B movie actors, and television personalities, often overpainted with Condos cursive characters. Articulating Condos caustic take on American culture, The American Wing likewise reflects on the role of museums in the construction of myths of national identity and culture.
Condo further extended his exploration of the human psyche into physical space in his sculptures. Cast in a variety of precious metals such as bronze and gold, the works immediately evoke multiple traditional sculptural techniques. But in Condos anarchic approach to figuration, art history and chronology can be reconfigured at will, according to a cut-up method that dissolves hierarchies and conventional narratives. This tension between futurism and archaism returns in Black Paintings, a rarely exhibited group of works from 2019 in which Condo depicts cyborgs and robots torn by existential doubts, ostensibly pushed to the edge of survival.
Condos systematic confrontation with art history both as a medium and a subject of his work continues in a series of Neo-Renaissance paintings and portraits of fictional aristocratic characters. In these paintings, Condo, once again, blends technical bravura with an irreverent approach to tradition.
A cycle of recent oil stick paintings reveals the ways in which the artist has assimilated the tragic events of 2020. In works such as Father and Daughter with Face Mask and Up Against the Wall, Condo reflects on isolation, proximity, and distance as the defining forces that have shaped life in the past year and a half.
Alongside the debut of Blues Paintings, The Picture Gallery also premieres a new group of Toy Heads, a cycle of paintings in which Condo continues his investigation around the construction of subjectivity and the endless possibilities of reinvention of the self.
The exhibition is completed by a cabinet of drawings, presenting more than 70 drawings, starting from sketches realized when the artist was just a teenager up to a series of careful studies for his paintings and recent largescale works. Together, these drawings, made over forty years, offer an unexpected insight into Condos ebullient creative process.