LONDON.- Sothebys S|2, in collaboration with curator Vito Schnabel, will show paintings by the American artist Ron Gorchov (b. 1930, Chicago) to the UK public for the first time. For the artists inaugural London solo-show, Schnabel has selected works spanning the full scope of the artists career, from the 1970s to today.
Gorchov emerged in the 1960s and 70s as part of a group of Manhattan-based abstract artists, such as Frank Stella, Richard Tuttle, Blinky Palermo and Ellsworth Kelly, who rejected the ubiquitous rectangular canvas in favour of new shapes and configurations. Painting on linen or canvas stretched across bespoke curved wooden frames (which Gorchov calls saddle-stretchers), the concave and convex structures have often been described as a hybrid between painting and sculpture. By warping the edges, corners and straight lines of the traditional flat canvas, these three dimensional works become perceptually disorientating when viewed.
The unique experience of viewing a Ron Gorchov work was eloquently described by the renowned critic Robert Storr, Dean of the Yale School of Art: near square but never square to near oval but never oval to near rectangular but never rectangular and all always bowed and in different sizes very small to very big- and in different orientations vertical and horizontal. The purpose
to subject the act of looking to the subtle stresses and pressures of not knowing quite where to focus
Gorchovs work is held in numerous major collections, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Detroit Institute of Art and the Guggenheim. Gorchovs painting, Comet, is on permanent view at MoMA having been part of the museums collection since 1979. In 2016, an exhibition of the artists work will be presented at the Hall Art Foundation in Vermont.
It was Vito Schnabel who organised the first comprehensive survey of the artists work in 2005 and this was quickly followed by a solo-show at MoMA PS1 the following year. Since then, interest in Gorchov - whose break-through on the New York art scene came in 1960, as part of the Whitney Museum's Young America 1960: Thirty American Painters Under ThirtySix has reached new heights. An independent spirit, who pushed at the boundaries of what a painting can be, his work continues to inspire a new generation of artists. The demand to own a Ron Gorchov has never been higher: at auction, the three top prices paid for a work by the artist have all been set within the last year.