London – “Alex Katz: Give Me Tomorrow” at Timothy Taylor Gallery, Through October 5th, 2012

October 5th, 2012


Image: Alex Katz, White Roses I, 2011, courtesy Timothy Taylor Gallery

Now in its final week at Timothy Taylor Gallery in London is a new series of portraits and still lifes by 84-year-old American artist Alex Katz. The exhibition is comprised of large-scale portraits of family and friends and still lifes of flowers that he bought from street vendors near his New York studio.


Image: Installation view, courtesy Timothy Taylor Gallery

Katz has participated in close to 500 group shows internationally since the 1950s, and has given over 200 solo exhibitions at galleries all over the world, including The Albertina, Vienna; The National Portrait Gallery, London; and The Whitney Museum of American Art, New York.


Image: Alex Katz, courtesy Timothy Taylor Gallery

One of the most influential and prominent artists of his generation, Katz developed his signature minimal style as a reaction to the Abstract Expressionism of the 1950s in New York. He began to work before the prominence of Pop Art, and has developed a formal language described by Timothy Taylor Gallery as having been “refined to a poetic harmony. His economy of line and nuanced use of color speak of a confidence and clarity of vision established over his rich and pioneering career.”


Image: Installation view, courtesy Timothy Taylor Gallery

Katz has expressed that he is interested in achieving a non-descriptive, instinctual interpretation of simple elements in his paintings. An innovator of the now-widespread minimalist aesthetic, his illustrations are stripped of all that is extra or unnecessary, utilizing white space, outlines, and non-blended uniform color, reducing everyday objects and real-life people in their most clear and purified state.


Image: Alex Katz, Vivien, 2012 courtesy Timothy Taylor Gallery

His subjects are simultaneously casual and austere in character, giving the viewer at once a sense of familiarity and a respectful distance from the subjects portrayed. He transforms emotional objects  such as flowers and the usually complex human face into objective, approachable subjects, open to interpretation from the viewer.

“Alex Katz: Give Me Tomorrow,” an exhibition focusing on Katz’s seascapes and beach scenes, was on display at Tate St. Ives through September 23rd and will move next to Turner Contemporary, Margate, where it will run from October 6th through January 13th.

-E.Baker

Links:
[Timothy Taylor Gallery]
[Tate St. Ives]
[The Pace Gallery]
[Turner Contemporary]
The Guardian]