Timothy Taylor Gallery is pleased to present an exhibition of new paintings by Alex Katz. The subject of over
200 solo exhibitions and nearly 500 group shows internationally since 1951, Katz has been honoured with
numerous retrospectives including The Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, USA; Tate St. Ives, UK;
Turner Contemporary, Margate, UK; and The Guggenheim, Bilbao, Spain. This is the artist’s seventh
exhibition with the gallery.
Katz’s paintings are at once figurative and abstract – his larger-than-life portraits and landscapes often
looming large over their observers. However, in these new works, rather than filling each frame, the subjects
are assigned to the margins with black space occupying most of each canvas. What is striking about these
new portraits is both the depth and diversity of the black paint contrasted against the dramatically studio-lit
figures. Presented within a ‘widescreen’ format, the figures become both cinematic and theatrical, resembling
performers caught mid-motion by a spotlight. Yet even within this framework, each painting still maintains
Katz’s signature cool sensibility.
In 2000, Katz created the large-format painting Ada’s Garden, comprised of a group of people against a
black background. While composed using the same technique – where Katz first ‘sketches’ subjects on his
16-inch boards (studies) before developing large images on canvas – these new portraits are instead
captured moments or fragments, less staged and more dynamic. Even where two figures occupy the same
frame, there is the distinct sense that the subjects were never present in the same room at the same time.
They are lost in their own thoughts, their own contemplation. There is no background, no narrative, other than
what the viewer brings to each work. This is essential for Katz’s tension – whereby the lack of a specific story
enables the viewer to complete the picture. It also allows Katz to create very contemporary images, as he
states: “I’m trying to paint the now. And narrative is a story, and once you get into the story it's no longer in
the real present tense.”
The art critic Barry Schwabsky recently noted that Katz’s choice of subject also contributes to the openness
of his work; his subjects verge on celebrity but remain for the most part unidentifiable, except in the social
group to which they belong. While this borderline recognisability makes Katz’s subjects and subsequently his
pictures so desirable, certain familiar subjects do reappear, most significantly his wife Ada, whom Katz has
been painting for almost 60 years.
Alex Katz was born in Brooklyn, New York in 1927. After graduating from the Cooper Union Art School in
Manhattan in 1949, he was awarded a scholarship by the Skowhegan School for Painting and Sculpture in
Maine. In 1968, Katz moved into an artists’ cooperative building in SoHo, New York, where he has lived and
worked ever since, spending his summers in Lincolnville, Maine.
The exhibition is accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue, including a conversation between Alex Katz and
Iwona Blazwick, Director, Whitechapel Gallery, London.