Nahmad Contemporary exhibits works by Andy Warhol, Christopher Wool, and Wade Guyton
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Nahmad Contemporary exhibits works by Andy Warhol, Christopher Wool, and Wade Guyton
WARHOL WOOL GUYTON at Nahmad Contemporary. Photographs by Tom Powel Imaging. © 2016 The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc. / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York. © Christopher Wool; Courtesy of the artist and Luhring Augustine, New York. © Wade Guyton; Courtesy of the artist and Petzel Gallery, New York.



NEW YORK, NY.- Nahmad Contemporary is presenting WARHOL, WOOL, GUYTON, on view through January 2017. The exhibition features a selection of late abstract paintings by Andy Warhol (1928–87) alongside paintings by two of today’s leading contemporary artists: Christopher Wool (b. 1955) and Wade Guyton (b. 1972). Produced in successive yet distinct periods between 1978 and 2010, the works converge formally through ambiguous marks and expressive gestures that summon the language of postwar abstract painting. The innovative print processes deployed by the artists operate as conceptual fibers unifying the diversity of paintings presented here.

In the decade before his death, Andy Warhol defied his iconic Pop-art reputation with a foray into abstract painting. Textural and painterly, the hazy silhouetted shapes that characterize the monumental silkscreens known as Shadows (1978-79) began as photographs of shadows cast by objects in the artist’s studio. The images were then silk-screened and applied to a canvas generously primed with paint. In Warhol’s Rorschach paintings from 1984, the amorphous inkblot-like shapes inspired by the psychological test of the same name epitomize the subjectivity of abstractionism. Although they solicit an emotional interpretation and evoke the gesture of the human hand, the works were actually created through mechanical means—using printmaking’s purest method—by applying paint to one half of an unstretched canvas, folding it along the center, and pressing the pigment onto the remaining half with a large dowel.

In his Eggs, Knives, and Crosses series, Warhol reinvigorated his portrayal of representational forms while simultaneously invoking the compositional principals of abstraction. Created between 1981 and 1982, the silhouetted arrangements of eggs, religious crosses, and kitchen knives emphasize figure-ground relationships, capitalizing on silkscreen’s ability to replicate each representational element, and ultimately bringing the works to the brink of abstraction.

The use of mechanical procedures to simultaneously embrace and eschew abstract expression has been perpetuated by Christopher Wool, who rose to prominence in the 1980s to re-engage with the thenoutmoded medium of painting. In the 1990s, the artist began fusing silk-screen techniques with digital technology, photographing forms and marks from his corpus of paintings and digitally altering them using Photoshop, converting them into silk screens, and transferring them anew onto canvases. His original painted gestures were manipulated by a succession of processes that left the artist’s presence undetectable. Akin to the images in Warhol’s Shadows and Rorschachs, the dense splatters, smears, and sinuous traceries in Wool’s works resemble traditional abstract mark-making, largely belying the technical innovations involved in their creation. Wool’s text-based If You (1992) resonates with Warhol’s Eggs, Knives, and Crosses series in the interplay it stages between representation and abstraction. The robust message recalls some of the fervor of Abstract Expressionism while the rigidity of composition communicates a formal sensibility akin to Color Field painting.

Wade Guyton similarly engages the latest technologies to conjure gestural expression. He digitally creates his compositions using computer programs to select, scan, and manipulate images and letters. The resulting compositions are transferred onto canvas using the artist’s signature Epson inkjet printer. Physically intervening in the mechanics of the printer’s operation, Guyton forces and drags the material through the machine, inducing glitches, blurs, and smears. Despite their computer-aided production, Guyton’s signature works, such as his flame paintings, are redolent with human expression: they embrace errors inherent to the printing mechanism—misaligned registers, fissured edges, drips of ink, and faded discolorations. Harkening back to both Wool’s textual paintings and Warhol’s representational silkscreens, Guyton’s digitally rendered Untitled (2008) depicts overlaid mutations of the letter “X,” resulting in an abstract composition consisting of a repeated figurative element.

The selection of paintings in WARHOL, WOOL, GUYTON traces the trajectory of Warhol’s influence on the work of Wool and Guyton, whose computer-aided printing techniques are a natural progression from the systematic silk-screen process pioneered by their precursor in mid-20th century. The various, highly technical means used by each of the artists yield evocative paintings that oscillate between abstraction and representation.










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