Richard Phillips
11 Jun - 01 Aug 2015
© Richard Phillips
Endless II, 2014
Oil and wax emulsion on linen
Triptych: 40 × 30 inches each (101.6 × 76.2 cm)
Photo by Rob McKeever
Endless II, 2014
Oil and wax emulsion on linen
Triptych: 40 × 30 inches each (101.6 × 76.2 cm)
Photo by Rob McKeever
RICHARD PHILLIPS
11 June – 1 August 2015
Gagosian Athens is pleased to present new paintings by Richard Phillips.
In his paintings, Phillips engages the complex web of human obsessions to do with sexuality, politics, power, death that are constantly exploited in mainstream media. Subjecting popular images to a range of classical painterly techniques, he estranges their familiarity and thus imbues them with new meaning. Photographic images of politicians are re-cast in neon, while supermodels are represented as academic paintings, as if to augment their status as pop icons. Over and over again throughout his work, the glossy idealism of advertising propaganda is subverted by his underlying resistance to its blatant seduction.
Departing from the more photorealistic tendencies of recent years, in his newest works Phillips culls celebrity portraits, retro textbook illustrations, logos, and Op Art motifs to produce compressed images in an electric palette. The subjects themselves are superceded by elements of Phillips's eccentric representation of them that emphasizes a synthesis of form, color, and critique. Psychedelic patterns overwhelm traces of familiar faces and images, all rendered in oil and wax emulsion. In the Warholian portrait Jim Morrison (2015), the rock star's face is mirrored flatly and mechanically against a bright green background. In Chinchillas and Guinea Pigs (2015), animals are similarly reduced to graphic silhouettes adorned with neon red, orange, and yellow stripes reminiscent of 1980s surf wear.
Paintings consumed by optically charged patterns represent an even more direct method of disorientation. Illustrations from psychology textbooks and religious cult periodicals are accelerated into strident abstractions. These mesmerizing repetitions are juxtaposed with figurative subjects in multi-panel paintings; in Endless II (2014), two "posterized" wartime images flank a pink infinity loop. In the diptych To Be Titled (The Venice Beach Connection) (2015), a faint close-up of Sharon Tate's face is engulfed by a vibrant rainbow spectrum. Expanding upon postmodern appropriation strategies through new and historical painting techniques, Phillips manipulates, recombines, amplifies, and viciously undermines canonical images, probing and challenging their dominant influence in contemporary culture.
Richard Phillips was born in Massachusetts in 1962, and lives and works in New York. Public collections include Museum of Modern Art, New York; Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo, New York; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; Denver Art Museum, Colorado; Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, Texas; Museum of Contemporary Art, North Miami; Tate Modern, London; and Van Abbemuseum, Eindhoven, The Netherlands. Selected solo exhibitions include "Richard Phillips," Kunsthalle Zurich (2000); "Richard Phillips," Kunstverein Hamburg (2002); "Richard Phillips: Paintings and Drawings," Le Consortium, Dijon (2004); "Richard Phillips: Lindsay Lohan," Institute of Modern Art, Brisbane, Australia (2014); and "Richard Phillips: Negation of the Universe," Dallas Contemporary (2014). His films Lindsay Lohan and Sasha Grey premiered at the Venice Biennale in 2011 and at the Institute of Modern Art, Brisbane in 2012. First Point premiered at Art Unlimited at Art Basel, Switzerland in June 2012.
11 June – 1 August 2015
Gagosian Athens is pleased to present new paintings by Richard Phillips.
In his paintings, Phillips engages the complex web of human obsessions to do with sexuality, politics, power, death that are constantly exploited in mainstream media. Subjecting popular images to a range of classical painterly techniques, he estranges their familiarity and thus imbues them with new meaning. Photographic images of politicians are re-cast in neon, while supermodels are represented as academic paintings, as if to augment their status as pop icons. Over and over again throughout his work, the glossy idealism of advertising propaganda is subverted by his underlying resistance to its blatant seduction.
Departing from the more photorealistic tendencies of recent years, in his newest works Phillips culls celebrity portraits, retro textbook illustrations, logos, and Op Art motifs to produce compressed images in an electric palette. The subjects themselves are superceded by elements of Phillips's eccentric representation of them that emphasizes a synthesis of form, color, and critique. Psychedelic patterns overwhelm traces of familiar faces and images, all rendered in oil and wax emulsion. In the Warholian portrait Jim Morrison (2015), the rock star's face is mirrored flatly and mechanically against a bright green background. In Chinchillas and Guinea Pigs (2015), animals are similarly reduced to graphic silhouettes adorned with neon red, orange, and yellow stripes reminiscent of 1980s surf wear.
Paintings consumed by optically charged patterns represent an even more direct method of disorientation. Illustrations from psychology textbooks and religious cult periodicals are accelerated into strident abstractions. These mesmerizing repetitions are juxtaposed with figurative subjects in multi-panel paintings; in Endless II (2014), two "posterized" wartime images flank a pink infinity loop. In the diptych To Be Titled (The Venice Beach Connection) (2015), a faint close-up of Sharon Tate's face is engulfed by a vibrant rainbow spectrum. Expanding upon postmodern appropriation strategies through new and historical painting techniques, Phillips manipulates, recombines, amplifies, and viciously undermines canonical images, probing and challenging their dominant influence in contemporary culture.
Richard Phillips was born in Massachusetts in 1962, and lives and works in New York. Public collections include Museum of Modern Art, New York; Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo, New York; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; Denver Art Museum, Colorado; Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, Texas; Museum of Contemporary Art, North Miami; Tate Modern, London; and Van Abbemuseum, Eindhoven, The Netherlands. Selected solo exhibitions include "Richard Phillips," Kunsthalle Zurich (2000); "Richard Phillips," Kunstverein Hamburg (2002); "Richard Phillips: Paintings and Drawings," Le Consortium, Dijon (2004); "Richard Phillips: Lindsay Lohan," Institute of Modern Art, Brisbane, Australia (2014); and "Richard Phillips: Negation of the Universe," Dallas Contemporary (2014). His films Lindsay Lohan and Sasha Grey premiered at the Venice Biennale in 2011 and at the Institute of Modern Art, Brisbane in 2012. First Point premiered at Art Unlimited at Art Basel, Switzerland in June 2012.