拍品专文
‘I like very much the qualities of lead – the surface, the heaviness; it gives the colour a different density and weight ... with the normal canvas you often have to kill the ground, give it something to react against. With the metals you already have something – its scratches, scrapes’ G. Förg
Executed in 1995, Untitled is a sumptuous example of Günther Förg’s celebrated series of lead paintings. Upon a dense grey ground, streaked and whorled with patina, the artist imposes a single strip of dusky pink, bisecting and anchoring the work’s volatile surface. Fascinated by the relationship between artwork, object, material and form, Förg sought to comprehend the properties of his chosen medium by observing its interaction with layers of pigment. ‘I like very much the qualities of lead – the surface, the heaviness,’ he explains; ‘it gives the colour a different density and weight ... with the normal canvas you often have to kill the ground, give it something to react against. With the metals you already have something - its scratches, scrapes’ (G. Förg, quoted in D. Ryan, Talking Painting, Karlsruhe 1997, http:/ www.david-ryan.co.uk/Gunther0Forg). Though reminiscent of Barnett Newman’s ‘zips’ or Mark Rothko’s shimmering colour fields, Förg’s lead paintings eschew any metaphysical claim. Indeed, Förg consciously distanced himself from the spiritual aesthetic espoused by his predecessors, preferring instead to conceive his work in purely material terms. Oxidised by the atmosphere and refined by its surroundings, the lead becomes a living, breathing surface: an unstable, constantly shifting field of texture and depth that works in lively counterpoint to Förg’s geometric band of paint.
Executed in 1995, Untitled is a sumptuous example of Günther Förg’s celebrated series of lead paintings. Upon a dense grey ground, streaked and whorled with patina, the artist imposes a single strip of dusky pink, bisecting and anchoring the work’s volatile surface. Fascinated by the relationship between artwork, object, material and form, Förg sought to comprehend the properties of his chosen medium by observing its interaction with layers of pigment. ‘I like very much the qualities of lead – the surface, the heaviness,’ he explains; ‘it gives the colour a different density and weight ... with the normal canvas you often have to kill the ground, give it something to react against. With the metals you already have something - its scratches, scrapes’ (G. Förg, quoted in D. Ryan, Talking Painting, Karlsruhe 1997, http:/ www.david-ryan.co.uk/Gunther0Forg). Though reminiscent of Barnett Newman’s ‘zips’ or Mark Rothko’s shimmering colour fields, Förg’s lead paintings eschew any metaphysical claim. Indeed, Förg consciously distanced himself from the spiritual aesthetic espoused by his predecessors, preferring instead to conceive his work in purely material terms. Oxidised by the atmosphere and refined by its surroundings, the lead becomes a living, breathing surface: an unstable, constantly shifting field of texture and depth that works in lively counterpoint to Förg’s geometric band of paint.