Carroll Dunham
27 Oct - 09 Dec 2006
CARROLL DUNHAM
"In Red Space"
27 Oct—9 Dec 2006
Hoxton Square
“I didn’t sit down and strategise my way to an image of a sightless humanoid with genitals growing out of its head in a funny hat. It just evolved from things connecting, triggering.”
Carroll Dunham
White Cube is pleased to present a new group work by the American artist Carroll Dunham. Dunham is renowned for exuberant drawings and paintings that depict the libidinous energy, violence and restless anxiety of American culture.
In the early 1980s, Dunham created paintings that explored traditions of American abstraction, finding bodily forms such as knots, nipples and wrinkles in the wood grain that he integrated into the composition of each work. He then developed a semi-figurative language of organic forms that has evolved, over the past decade, into recognisable figures that inhabit an amoral playground, where characters brandish their genitalia like weapons and bits of fleshy forms share the canvas with visceral marks and splatters of paint. This exhibition will feature a series of five paintings titled ’In Red Space’ and a sixth called Mule. A group of drawings related to the paintings will also be exhibited.
The series of ’In Red Space’ paintings that form the core of the show depict an American everyman in a blue shirt, grey suit and an iconic men’s hat from another era. While the formal qualities of these canvases bring to mind the geometric abstraction prominent in mid-century America, the figure looks like a schematic diagram of the idealised 1950s Father, all buttoned-up and rigid. Despite his workaday appearance, his face has been transformed into male genitalia, his nose half phallus, half musical instrument, and his body and face flattened into jigsaw puzzle-like patterns. In a painting such as In Red Space (four), the figurative elements are difficult to recognise, the suit reduced to a bar of grey along the right edge of the painting, the back of the head to a grey triangle with two bulbous appendages. The rich red background only underlines the rigor mortis of the figure and the air of repressed desire.
The figures depicted in the ’In Red Space’ paintings have their counterpart in the relaxed and recumbent figure of Mule. Here the upright everyman, still topped by a brown hat, has been transformed into a figure of unhinged desire and appetite. The skin is sickly pink, the brushwork loose, the canvas smeared with muddy paint and cluttered with bits of debris. The central figure, so rigid in the ’In Red Space’ paintings, has been softened and stripped bare, revealing female genitalia, a gaping hole in the lower centre of the picture.
An illustrated catalogue, with a text by art historian David Anfam and interview with painter Alexi Worth, will accompany the exhibition.
Carroll Dunham has exhibited widely in both solo and group exhibitions. The New Museum of Contemporary Art, New York, hosted a retrospective of his work in 2002-03.
© Carroll Dunham
In Red Space (one)
Mixed media on linen
75 x 70 in. (190.5 x 177.8 cm)
2006
"In Red Space"
27 Oct—9 Dec 2006
Hoxton Square
“I didn’t sit down and strategise my way to an image of a sightless humanoid with genitals growing out of its head in a funny hat. It just evolved from things connecting, triggering.”
Carroll Dunham
White Cube is pleased to present a new group work by the American artist Carroll Dunham. Dunham is renowned for exuberant drawings and paintings that depict the libidinous energy, violence and restless anxiety of American culture.
In the early 1980s, Dunham created paintings that explored traditions of American abstraction, finding bodily forms such as knots, nipples and wrinkles in the wood grain that he integrated into the composition of each work. He then developed a semi-figurative language of organic forms that has evolved, over the past decade, into recognisable figures that inhabit an amoral playground, where characters brandish their genitalia like weapons and bits of fleshy forms share the canvas with visceral marks and splatters of paint. This exhibition will feature a series of five paintings titled ’In Red Space’ and a sixth called Mule. A group of drawings related to the paintings will also be exhibited.
The series of ’In Red Space’ paintings that form the core of the show depict an American everyman in a blue shirt, grey suit and an iconic men’s hat from another era. While the formal qualities of these canvases bring to mind the geometric abstraction prominent in mid-century America, the figure looks like a schematic diagram of the idealised 1950s Father, all buttoned-up and rigid. Despite his workaday appearance, his face has been transformed into male genitalia, his nose half phallus, half musical instrument, and his body and face flattened into jigsaw puzzle-like patterns. In a painting such as In Red Space (four), the figurative elements are difficult to recognise, the suit reduced to a bar of grey along the right edge of the painting, the back of the head to a grey triangle with two bulbous appendages. The rich red background only underlines the rigor mortis of the figure and the air of repressed desire.
The figures depicted in the ’In Red Space’ paintings have their counterpart in the relaxed and recumbent figure of Mule. Here the upright everyman, still topped by a brown hat, has been transformed into a figure of unhinged desire and appetite. The skin is sickly pink, the brushwork loose, the canvas smeared with muddy paint and cluttered with bits of debris. The central figure, so rigid in the ’In Red Space’ paintings, has been softened and stripped bare, revealing female genitalia, a gaping hole in the lower centre of the picture.
An illustrated catalogue, with a text by art historian David Anfam and interview with painter Alexi Worth, will accompany the exhibition.
Carroll Dunham has exhibited widely in both solo and group exhibitions. The New Museum of Contemporary Art, New York, hosted a retrospective of his work in 2002-03.
© Carroll Dunham
In Red Space (one)
Mixed media on linen
75 x 70 in. (190.5 x 177.8 cm)
2006