Works on Paper: Barnaby Furnas, Jim Nutt, Eduardo Paolozzi
September 24 – October 23, 2010
Opening reception: Thursday, September 23, 6 – 8 PM
Marianne Boesky Gallery is pleased to present an exhibition of works on paper by Barnaby Furnas, Jim Nutt and Eduardo
Paolozzi. This grouping of works highlights the artists’ intricate processes of mark making, lines, patterning, fragmentation,
and at times vibrant use of color. Each artist imbues his work with themes borrowed from popular culture of their respective
times, as well as influences of Surrealism, Cubism, and Pop.
Eduardo Paolozzi is best known as a pioneer of the Pop Art movement in Britain in the 1950’s and 1960’s. Similar to Furnas
and Nutt, Paolozzi was fascinated by popular culture, and as a European especially that of America. He created scrapbooks
of cutouts from magazines, comics and advertisements, as well as packaging from processed food, that developed into
elaborate collages. Paolozzi’s series of screenprints entitled Bunk (1972), which refers to the American slang ‘bunkum’ for
rubbish or nonsense, was based on original collages from 1947-52 and comments on the barrage of mass media in one’s daily
visual landscape and its inconsequential nature. He also indicates one’s relationship to popular culture as symbiotic,
reassembling imagery to craft a meaning of his own; a sort of time capsule of his era. Paolozzi used his collages to create
subverted portraits representing contemporary figures of the 1940’s and 1950’s, as well as x-rated figurative scenes from
1953-1954. Paolozzi compresses his faces and figures, embellishing the collages with dark graphite lines and acrylic. Erotic
detailing is layered atop seemingly quotidian imagery, rendering the works visually explicit through their sly additions.
Jim Nutt presents a selection of intricate, signature-styled graphite drawings, several of which are upon watercolor paper,
further underlining the texture of their medium. In his earlier paintings of the 1960’s and 1970’s, Nutt painted dramatic
scenes of fantastic, disfigured, fragmented, sexually charged bodies, using pop culture imagery from magazines and comic
books, as well as influences of Cubism and Surrealism. In the late 1980’s, Nutt began to utilize the same dramatic synthesis
to a much subtler affect; creating overall seemingly elegant portraits of women. These enigmatic portraits are delicately
executed, from the deformed, vaguely suggestive noses, petal shaped nostrils, jagged ears, and asymmetrical eyes, to the
meticulous cross hatching and fine patterning of the clothes and hair. Nutt’s refined use of the drawn line is highlighted in
these works where the image is flattened and the negative space of the paper becomes part of the drawn image through
impeccably delicate mark making.
In Barnaby Furnas’ new watercolors on paper, various states of human emotion and psychology are depicted; from the
intimacy and ecstasy of his coupled lovers, to the subverted stoicism of his contemplative figures. In the series The Way to
Heaven, the matrices of lines and complex patterned background flatten the space in the manner of a Matisse interior, while
simultaneously the central focus of entangled bodies appear as a fluid shape. In this newest series, Furnas employs a new
line of rainbow coloring that underlines the explosions of ecstasy and dances brightly across the paper. Throughout Furnas’
work, the influence of comic books and video games is evident in the use of active lines, repetition and fragmentation.
Known for employing a technique of fragmentation and patterning to convey a sense of motion or trajectory, whether it be a
flashing spot light at a rock concert or a bullet tearing through human flesh in a Civil War scene, in these new portraits
Furnas employs a similar method of division and repetition to create a more suspended image. The aggregate of Furnas’
energetic line and angular, staccato style, allows the realistic detail of traditional portraiture to begin to collapse into
abstraction. Like Paolozzi, Furnas highlights areas of his figures with bright colors, alluding to both a rawness and a warm
sensuality.
Whether in couplings or solitary figures, Furnas, Nutt and Paolozzi allude to a dissecting of their subject’s physiognomy,
layering imagery with geometrical forms and patterning. As seen throughout the exhibition, the artists’ augmentation of
repeated details and the strength of linear execution break down conventional spatial elements and figurative standards to
create a dynamic synthesis of representation and abstraction.
This exhibition is presented in collaboration with David Nolan Gallery.
Marianne Boesky Gallery is located at 118 East 64th Street, between Park and Lexington Avenues. Gallery hours are Tuesday
to Saturday from 10am to 5.30pm. For further information or images, please contact Annie Rana at 212.680.9889 or
[email protected].