Jerry Zeniuk
29 Oct 2011 - 21 Jan 2012
JERRY ZENIUK
Paintings 1976 - 2011
29 October, 2011 - 21 January, 2012
Jerry Zeniuk, American painter, born in 1945 in Bradowick near Lüneburg, Germany.
In 1950, his family relocated to the United States and, following university studies in Boulder, Zeniuk moved to New York in 1969 to live and paint in the metropolis of art. His appointment as a professor of painting at the Academy of Fine Arts in Munich ushered in another momentous shift, requiring him to take up residence in Germany starting in 1992. Yet there are a number of good reasons that would justify such a step. The ability to share insights, knowledge and experience with younger artists has proven itself as an enduring motivation for the painter.
In 2011, after retiring from his teaching position, the artist moved into a spacious new studio, still in Munich, the city that can only conditionally be described as his adopted hometown. In any case, the site of work – light and space – has always been the place for the painter where such questions are made irrelevant.
The year 1977 marked the beginning of the partnership with the Annemarie Verna Galerie. An exhibition of virtually monochrome paintings, brown, beige, presented color as a veiled potentiality. The same year, the artist’s paintings were included at Documenta 6 in Kassel. Since the early 1970s, painting that shows the process and conditions of its formation and which establishes color and the image support as the reason for the work and its justification has served as a way for the medium to re-enter the artistic discourse.
Jerry Zeniuk wants more, he wants to paint paintings that do not merely portray a self-referential, theoretically based circular argument. Of course, the actions of the painter and the reflection of his dialog with the material are what allow the painting to come into its own. Yet for Jerry Zeniuk, this should not lead to reduction and programmatic schemes, to all but predetermined results. For him, color is a leitmotif and stimulating source of energy. Since 1980, his paintings have increasingly opened up to color and chromaticity. During a certain period of years, he produced paintings exhibiting a finely woven pictorial structure. A light/dark theme subsequently brought about changes, at first subtle and later dramatic, in the previous, quasi tone-on-tone shadings. The application of paint becomes more intense, as the components of form occupying the canvas take on a fragmented character and the palette knife typically lends an active presence to the color matter. Compositional elements, hardly calculated, more the spontaneous result of the visual tumult, characterize the findings in a striking manner.
For a number of years now, his works have been dominated by a loose, spacious pictorial order, allowing an interaction of mostly round cells. This is the productive prerequisite for laying out the pictorial field according to the interplay of formulations. Viewers must engage with the things that happen in these works and the places where the extraordinary transpires by visually entering the work with which they find themselves confronted. In no way can the painting be taken in as a whole at a single glance. It is only through the process of seeing, in effect palpating the pictorial content over an extended period of time, that the viewer gains access to the diversity of the color moments and the vibration of intermediary spaces.
Our retrospective includes works from 1977 to 2011. It documents the richness and vitality of this painting that seeks to satisfy only itself.
Paintings 1976 - 2011
29 October, 2011 - 21 January, 2012
Jerry Zeniuk, American painter, born in 1945 in Bradowick near Lüneburg, Germany.
In 1950, his family relocated to the United States and, following university studies in Boulder, Zeniuk moved to New York in 1969 to live and paint in the metropolis of art. His appointment as a professor of painting at the Academy of Fine Arts in Munich ushered in another momentous shift, requiring him to take up residence in Germany starting in 1992. Yet there are a number of good reasons that would justify such a step. The ability to share insights, knowledge and experience with younger artists has proven itself as an enduring motivation for the painter.
In 2011, after retiring from his teaching position, the artist moved into a spacious new studio, still in Munich, the city that can only conditionally be described as his adopted hometown. In any case, the site of work – light and space – has always been the place for the painter where such questions are made irrelevant.
The year 1977 marked the beginning of the partnership with the Annemarie Verna Galerie. An exhibition of virtually monochrome paintings, brown, beige, presented color as a veiled potentiality. The same year, the artist’s paintings were included at Documenta 6 in Kassel. Since the early 1970s, painting that shows the process and conditions of its formation and which establishes color and the image support as the reason for the work and its justification has served as a way for the medium to re-enter the artistic discourse.
Jerry Zeniuk wants more, he wants to paint paintings that do not merely portray a self-referential, theoretically based circular argument. Of course, the actions of the painter and the reflection of his dialog with the material are what allow the painting to come into its own. Yet for Jerry Zeniuk, this should not lead to reduction and programmatic schemes, to all but predetermined results. For him, color is a leitmotif and stimulating source of energy. Since 1980, his paintings have increasingly opened up to color and chromaticity. During a certain period of years, he produced paintings exhibiting a finely woven pictorial structure. A light/dark theme subsequently brought about changes, at first subtle and later dramatic, in the previous, quasi tone-on-tone shadings. The application of paint becomes more intense, as the components of form occupying the canvas take on a fragmented character and the palette knife typically lends an active presence to the color matter. Compositional elements, hardly calculated, more the spontaneous result of the visual tumult, characterize the findings in a striking manner.
For a number of years now, his works have been dominated by a loose, spacious pictorial order, allowing an interaction of mostly round cells. This is the productive prerequisite for laying out the pictorial field according to the interplay of formulations. Viewers must engage with the things that happen in these works and the places where the extraordinary transpires by visually entering the work with which they find themselves confronted. In no way can the painting be taken in as a whole at a single glance. It is only through the process of seeing, in effect palpating the pictorial content over an extended period of time, that the viewer gains access to the diversity of the color moments and the vibration of intermediary spaces.
Our retrospective includes works from 1977 to 2011. It documents the richness and vitality of this painting that seeks to satisfy only itself.