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Sunday, August 24, 2025 |
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William Turner Gallery announces an exhibition of Alex Couwenberg's most recent paintings |
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Alex Couwenberg, Ke Nui, 2025. Acrylic and spray on canvas. 72 x 66.
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SANTA MONICA, CA.- William Turner Gallery will present Alex Couwenberg: Highline, featuring the artists newest paintings. The exhibition opens with a reception on September 13, 2025, from 58 PM and runs through November 8, 2025.
In his latest series, Couwenberg orchestrates an ensemble of color, light, line and textureeach piece a visual improvisation that melds razor‑sharp precision with spontaneous intuition. His multilayered canvases pulsate with pearlescent glimmers and atmospheric gradients, where masking, spray techniques and hand‑scraped striations reference the sleek contours of ship hulls, car fins and coastal vessels. The forms are in restless motion - shifting, sliding, overlapping - one into the next. Light itself becomes a primary collaborator, dancing across surfaces in harmonic counterpoint to geometric forms and interrupted gridlines.
Couwenbergs work taps into the visual rhythms of Southern California, where headlights and taillights play a noir contrapuntal beat to sunlight skittering across waves or filtering in gentle patterns through window blinds on a summer morning. In fact, Couwenberg likens his process to navigating a city: full of green lights, stop signs, and unexpected turns and views. This interplay between control and spontaneity animates the work, producing compositions that simultaneously convey tension and resolution. The resulting pieces are both formally rigorous and emotionally resonantvivid reflections of an artist deeply attuned to the aesthetics of movement, light, and the layered complexity of memory and lived experience.
Born and based in Southern California, Couwenberg channels the contradictory dialectics of the region: the soft luminosity of ocean vistas and open sky versus the relentless linearity of urban freeway systems. His methoda reductive and additive layering ritualrecalls an abstract archaeology: excavated textures meet precise hard‑edge forms in a personal vernacular built from cultural signifiers and industrial gestures.
A graduate of Art Center College of Design and Claremont Graduate School, Couwenberg studied with Karl Benjamin, a pivotal figure in defining Southern Californias hard‑edge abstraction. Other influences are deeply woven into Couwenbergs practice as well, ranging from the Finish Fetish movementsurfboard, custom‑car gloss, resin surfaces created with industrial rigorto Light & Spaces subtle manipulations of perception.
Couwenbergs work is represented in numerous museum collections, including the Frederick R. Weisman Museum, the Long Beach Museum of Art, Lancaster Museum of Art & History, Laguna Art Museum, Crocker Art Museum, and the Daum Museum of Art in Missouri. In 2007, he received the Joan Mitchell Foundation Award for painting.
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