Preview Reception:
Saturday, September 24, 6 – 9 p.m.
A Participating Gallery
As Part of the Getty Initiative
Pacific Standard Time: Art in L.A. 1945 – 1980
Hans Burkhardt’s (1904–1994) expansive career and influence in L.A. are the focus of a survey exhibition of paintings
and drawings entitled Hans Burkhardt: Within & Beyond the Mainstream. The exhibition is part of the October 1
inauguration of the Getty’s initiative Pacific Standard Time: Art in L.A. 1945 – 1980. The Burkhardt exhibition opens
with a preview reception Saturday, September 24 at Jack Rutberg Fine Arts in Los Angeles.
Arriving in L.A. in 1937, following his association with Arshile Gorky, whose studio he shared in New York from 1928-
37, Burkhardt represented L.A.’s earliest and most critical link to the New York School. The exhibition will also
juxtapose Burkhardt’s works with contemporaneous reviews and rare archival documentation spanning more than six
decades.
Included are important paintings shown in his first solo exhibition at the Stendahl Gallery, and his first museum
exhibition at the Los Angeles County Museum in 1945, which the L.A. Times called an exhibition of “…dynamic
power…a striking transfer of feeling into form.”
Following that museum exhibition, Burkhardt was both critically celebrated and “censored,” as his works proved
controversial in the years leading up to the McCarthy Era, when modern artists in L.A. were seen as Communist
threats. Particularly controversial were his anti-war paintings and Hollywood studio strike paintings, including his
“indictment” of then, Screen Actor Guild head, Ronald Reagan. “Less incendiary” subjects also proved controversial,
such as his Crucifixion Series – condemned for his use of red color and abstract style, regarded as subversive;
examples of which are included in Hans Burkhardt: Within & Beyond the Mainstream.
Works of the 1950s onward were hugely influential to young artists emerging onto the scene. Artists ranging from Ed
Kienholz, John Altoon and Karl Benjamin to Tony Berlant, Michael C. McMillen etc, were impacted by Burkhardt’s
independent and provocative works, as he received extensive critical recognition. In the 1950s alone, Burkhardt had an impressive 23 solo exhibitions including a 10 year Retrospective at the Pasadena Art Museum, as well as museums in
the U.S., Mexico and the Sao Paulo Biennale.
In the 1960s Burkhardt was the subject of museum retrospectives at San Diego Art Institute and San Diego Museum of
Art and afforded a 30 year retrospective exhibition at the Santa Barbara Museum, San Francisco’s Palace of the
Legion of Honor and Los Angeles Municipal Art Gallery.
Also shown in the Rutberg exhibition will be Burkhardt’s profound anti-war paintings of the 1960s and 70s, reacting to
the Vietnam War, prompting art historian Donald Kuspit to cite: “Burkhardt is the master - indeed the inventor of the
Abstract Memento Mori.” Throughout these years, Burkhardt taught at numerous schools; among them: USC, UCLA,
Choinard, Otis, and CSUN where his influence was profound.
The reactive and prescient nature of Burkhardt’s work is evident in the exhibition, through the earliest anti-war subjects
dating as early as 1938 through his final painting included in this exhibition dating 1993. His Graffiti Series of the early
1980s shows Burkhardt to have been among the earliest responses to graffiti art. In 1992 Hans Burkhardt received the
American Academy’s Lifetime Achievement Award.
Hans Burkhardt was born in 1904 in Basel, Switzerland. He arrived in New York in 1924. When he arrived in Los
Angeles in 1937, he represented the most critical link between L.A. and the New York School, as he was part of its
genesis. Burkhardt lived in Los Angeles until his death in 1994.
Hans Burkhardt: Within & Beyond the Mainstream is part of the Getty initiative Pacific Standard Time: Art in LA
1945-1980. This unprecedented collaboration, initiated by the Getty, brings together more than sixty cultural institutions
and selected private galleries from across Southern California for six months beginning October 2011 to tell the story
of the birth of the L.A. art scene. Hans Burkhardt's career was the most expansive in L.A.'s history, spanning more than
six decades, influencing generations of artists.
Hans Burkhardt: Within & Beyond the Mainstream opens with a preview reception on September 24, extending
through December 24 at Jack Rutberg Fine Arts located at 357 N. La Brea Avenue. Gallery hours are Tuesday through
Friday 10:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m., and Saturday 10:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Related educational programs will be announced in
the future. The exhibition is presented with the support of Consulate General of Switzerland. The estate of Hans
Burkhardt, The Hans G. & Thordis W. Burkhardt Foundation, is exclusively represented by Jack Rutberg Fine Arts. For
further information on the exhibition, educational programs or the forthcoming Burkhardt documentary, please contact
Jack Rutberg Fine Arts at Tel (323) 938-5222 or Email [email protected]
- Images available for press purposes -
As part of the The J. Paul Getty Museum’s Pacific Standard Time: Art in L.A. 1945-1980,
Hans Burkhardt works are included in the following museum exhibitions:
Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County
Real and Imagined: Southern California Artists Represent the Landscape, 1945-1980
Los Angeles Municipal Gallery
Civic Virtue: The Impact of the Los Angeles Municipal Art Gallery
Pacific Asia Museum
A History of the Pasadena Art Museum
Pasadena Museum of California Art
L.A. Raw: Abject Expressionism in Los Angeles, 1945-1980, From Rico Lebrun to Paul McCarthy
Santa Barbara Museum of Art
Pasadena to Santa Barbara: A Selected History of Art in Southern California 1951-1969