Fridericianum

Forrest Bess

15 Feb - 06 Sep 2020

Forrest Bess, Installation view, © Fridericianum, Kassel, 2020. Photo: Andrea Rossetti
Forrest Bess, Installation view, © Fridericianum, Kassel, 2020. Photo: Andrea Rossetti
Forrest Bess, Installation view, © Fridericianum, Kassel, 2020. Photo: Andrea Rossetti
Forrest Bess, Installation view, © Fridericianum, Kassel, 2020. Photo: Andrea Rossetti
Forrest Bess, Installation view, © Fridericianum, Kassel, 2020. Photo: Andrea Rossetti
Forrest Bess: Untitled (No. 5), 1949 © The artist and Collection Mickey Cartin
Forrest Bess: Untitled (#6), 1957 © The artist. Private collection, Courtesy Modern Art, London. Photo: Robert Glowacki
Forrest Bess: Untitled (#11), 1957 © Private collection, Courtesy Franklin Parrasch Gallery, New York. Photo: Kent Pell
Forrest Bess: Untitled (The Spider), 1970 © The artist. Private collection, Courtesy Modern Art, London. Photo: Robert Glowacki
Forrest Bess: Untitled (No. 13), 1950 © The artist. Private collection, New York. Photo: Stewart Clements
Forrest Bess, born in 1911 in Bay City, Texas, where he also died in 1977, led an extremely secluded existence in the first half of the 1940s on the Gulf of Mexico, where alongside catching and selling fishing bait he dedicated himself to painting. During this time, Bess began to systematically encapsulate in painting “visions” that appeared to him on the threshold between wakefulness and sleep. For Bess, subconscious human experiences manifested themselves in these abstract and highly symbolic images. He pursed their exploration like a piece of obsessive research that he articulated in countless records and intensive correspondence without ever unravelling the mystery of his creativity.

The Fridericianum presents the first exhibition in Germany of the artist’s work for over three decades. The show allows visitors to rediscover this outstanding exponent of postwar art, who is as relevant for contemporary discourse as he is enigmatic.
 

Tags: Forrest Bess