Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac is pleased to announce the exhibition New Landscapes by Alex Katz. The American artist, currently exhibited at the
Serpentine Gallery in London with his recent Quick Light series, had occupied the four halls of the Pantin gallery in 2014 with the exhibition 45
Years of Portraits, 1969-2014. From 5 July, Alex Katz will unveil his most recent works in the Marais gallery. This series features around twenty
sketches of landscapes and several monumental paintings around the same theme.
From the early 1950s, Alex Katz anticipated the American Pop Art movement with images inspired by billboards, drawing from the principle of serial
reproduction and creating portraits free from any psychological attribute. He quickly detached himself from the Pop Art movement, establishing his
personal style. Well-known for his female portraits, landscapes, as well as outdoor and night scenes, Kats always paints with simplicity, creating
clearly outlined forms. Some of his large-scale paintings, such as the ones from The Black Dress (1960) and Blue Umbrella series, have left a
lasting impression in our collective memory.
The atmosphere of his paintings is rooted in the particularity of his style, at once rigorous, modernist, and refined, suggesting a both radical and
simple realism. The clear-cut forms, and vibrant, monochrome coats of paint represent the essential elements of the artist’s style. Always painting in
natural light, Katz’ is concerned with the subject of visual perception. In this way, he translates classic genres, such as portraiture, landscape and
outdoor painting into a contemporary figurative style.
Referring to the artist’s works exhibited at the Serpentine gallery, Jackie Wullschlanger wrote in the Financial Times of 4 July, 2016: “Katz has over
the years challenged yet absorbed something from every mainstream American movement: Abstract Expressionism’s heroic dimensions, Pop’s
deadpan flatness, Minimalism’s austerity”.
The landscapes exhibited in the Marais gallery represent the fragile branch of a tree, the clearing on the edge of a forest, a house surrounded by
nature. Regardless of the subject, Alex Katz paints with an economy of lines, simplifying form to convey an idea of painting based on the Essential.
The different elements are part of a single plane, almost entirely losing any notion of depth.
A brushstroke suggests the silhouette of a branch, a touch of paint transforms into a leaf, two lines recall the shape of a window – Alex Katz
develops a refined, allegorical style. The majority of landscapes were realized in Maine, USA. To the artist, the light of this particular region is richer
and darker than the one evoked by the Impressionists. Regarding the subject, Katz says: “That helped me separate myself from European painting
and find my own eyes”.