COLLECTION NAME:
Visual Resources Teaching Collection
mediaCollectionId
ArtArtHiAAH~7~7
Visual Resources Teaching Collection
Collection
true
Image Record ID:
aahi0002258
image_record_id
aahi0002258
Image Record ID
false
Work Title (display):
Cage (6)
Image Title:
full view
Work Dates (display):
2006
Work Dates type:
creation
Image Date (display):
2008-08-15
Work Creator (display):
Gerhard Richter (German, born 1932)
Work Creator gender:
male
work_creator_or_agent_gender
male
Work Creator gender
false
Work Creator notes (display):
German painter. He studied painting from 1951 to 1956 at the Kunstakademie in Dresden and continued living there until he moved to West Germany in 1961 to resume his studies at the Kunstakademie in Düsseldorf until 1963. There he was taught by the painter Karl Otto Götz (b 1914), a leading German representative of Art Informel; he was especially close to two fellow students, Sigmar Polke and Konrad Lueg (b. 1939), the latter of whom was to change his surname to Fischer and become an influential dealer in contemporary art. In the early 1960s Richter was exposed to both American and British Pop art, which was just becoming known in Europe, and to the Fluxus movement. In response to these trends, he and Lueg organized a Demonstration in Support of Capitalist Realism as a one-day event in a department store, Berges, in Düsseldorf on 11 October 1963, displaying furniture on pedestals as works of art and placing themselves in the room also as exhibits. In spite of this event, which had elements of both conceptual art and performance art, Richter consistently regarded himself simply as a painter. He set into motion a systematic exploration of his chosen medium in 1962, when he began to paint enlarged copies of black-and-white photographs using only a range of greys, as in Cow (1964; Bonn, Städt. Kstmus.) or Kitchen Chair (1965; Recklinghausen, Städt. Ksthalle; see fig.). Unlike the Photorealists, whose work emerged in the late 1960s, Richter used photographs as a starting-point rather than as a model to be copied as closely as possible as an end in itself. The evident reliance on a ready-made source gave Richter's paintings an apparent objectivity that he felt was lacking in abstract art of the period. The indistinctness of the images that emerged in the course of their transformation into thick layers of oil paint, moreover, helped free them of traditional associations and meaning, so that they could be apprehended as pure painting. To these ends Richter took as his source material images that appeared casually chosen, inconsequential in subject and lacking in artistic pretension, for example holiday snapshots, as in Family at the Seaside (1964; Bonn, Städt. Kstmus.), or newspaper photographs. Setting aside traditional concerns with subject-matter and composition, Richter concentrated exclusively on the process of applying paint to the surface not only as a means of conveying information but also as an expressive force. Richter continued painting pictures from black-and-white photographs during the 1960s and early 1970s, basing them on a variety of sources: from newspapers and books, sometimes incorporating their captions, as in Helga Matura (1966; Toronto, A.G. Ont.); private snapshots; aerial views of towns and mountains, for example Cityscape Madrid (1968; Bonn, Städt. Kstmus.) and Alps (1968; Frankfurt am Main, Mus. Mod. Kst); seascapes (196970); and a large multi-partite work, Forty-eight Portraits (19712; Cologne, Mus. Ludwig), for which he chose mainly the faces of composers such as Gustav Mahler and Jean Sibelius, and of writers such as H. G. Wells and Franz Kafka. In 1969 Richter produced the first of a group of grey monochromes that consist exclusively of the textures resulting from different methods of paint application. As early as 1966 he had made paintings based on colour charts, using the rectangles of colour as found objects in an apparently limitless variety of hue; these culminated in 19734 in a series of large-format pictures such as 256 Colours (enamel paint on canvas, 2.22×4.14 m, 1974, repainted 1984; Bonn, Städt. Kstmus.), in which painting was reduced to its elemental physical existence. Although these paintings, like those based on photographs, were still dependent on an existing artefact, all that was left in them was the naked physical presence of colour as the essential material of all painting. All vestiges of subject-matter seem to have been abandoned by Richter in the paintings that he began to produce in 1976, such as Abstract Painting (1977; Buffalo, NY, AlbrightKnox A.G.), in which he used often shrill colours and broad gestures. He remained faithful, however, to the paradoxical nature of his art, since even these supposedly wholly invented paintings retained a second-hand look, as if the brushstrokes had been copied from photographic enlargements. Concurrently he also painted conventional-looking landscapes that were self-evidently photographic in origin, for example Meadow (1987; see 1988 exh. cat., no. 5). The extreme variety of Richter's work left him open to criticism, but his rejection of an artificially maintained consistency of style was a conscious conceptual act that allowed him to investigate freely the basic principles of painting. Oblivious to usual strictures of linear development, he left open the possibility of adopting whatever idiom best suited his purpose, as in a series of pictures, 18. Oktober 1977 (see 1989 exh. cat.), produced in 1988 from black-and-white photographs recording the death of members of the Red Army Faction while imprisoned in West Germany. Given their highly political connotations, these pictures introduced a further provocation to Richter's observations about painting as an objective activity. (Grove Art Online Accessed 2006-07-26)
Work Style Period:
21st century
work_styleperiod
21st century
Work Style Period
false
Work Style Period:
Contemporary
work_styleperiod
Contemporary
Work Style Period
false
Work Subject:
Cage, John (1912-1992)
subject
Cage, John (1912-1992)
Work Subject
false
Work Worktype:
oil paintings
work_type
oil paintings
Work Worktype
false
Work Worktype:
paintings (visual works)
work_type
paintings (visual works)
Work Worktype
false
Work Category (VRC classification):
paintings
work_category__ucbaahvrc_classification_
paintings
Work Category (VRC classification)
false
Work Material and Technique (display):
oil on canvas
Work Measurements (display):
300 cm (H) x 300 cm (W)
Image Source Reproduction citation:
La Biennale de Venezia. Think with the Senses, Feel with the Mind: Art in the Present Tense/ la Biennale di Venezia ; 52. Exposizione internzionale d'arte ; [curated by Robert Storr]. New York : Rizzoli International, 2007.
image_source_copy_from_print_name
La Biennale de Venezia. Think with the Senses, Feel with the Mind: Art in the Present Tense/ la Biennale di Venezia ; 52. Exposizione internzionale d'arte ; [curated by Robert Storr]. New York : Rizzoli International, 2007.
Image Source Reproduction citation
false
Image Source Reproduction refid:
978-88-317-9256-1
Image Source Reproduction page number:
301
Image Source Reproduction plate-figure number:
bottom
Image Source Reproduction refid type:
ISBN
Image Rights (display):
unknown
Image Rights fair use checklist:
1) use of this image is for education and educational research; 2) access is restricted to University of Colorado and Auraria Higher Education Center communities; 3) the original photographer is credited if known; 4) the image is published; 5) the amount of the work in relation to the whole is needed for education or educational research; 6) the number of derivatives is the minimum required for education or educational research; 7) the image has not been found to be reasonably available for sale; 8) duplication of the image does not violate preexisting contracts.
Work Rights (display):
© Gerhard Richter
Terms of Agreement and Conditions of Use:
YOU AGREE: Luna Imaging's Insight Software and the digital image collection associated with it (the Software) are being provided by the University of Colorado under the following license. By obtaining, using, and/or copying this work, you (the Licensee) agree that you have read, understood, and will comply with the following terms and conditions. 1. The Software contains the University of Colorado's Department of Art and Art History's implementation of a digital image collection; 2. Any images obtained through use of the Software will be used only for non-profit, educational purposes; 3. The use of images obtained through the software will only be used while the Licensee is either: a) an employee of the University of Colorado, Metropolitan State College of Denver, or the Community College of Denver, or b) an enrolled student at the University of Colorado, Metropolitan State College of Denver, or the Community College of Denver; 4. When the Licensee is no longer an employee or student of the University of Colorado, Metropolitan State College of Denver or Community College of Denver, either by an action of the University of Colorado, Metropolitan State College of Denver or the Community College of Denver or due to actions of the Licensee, the licensee will cease to use any images exported from the Department of Art and Art History's digital image collection; 5. The Licensee agrees to indemnify the University for claims and liability arising out of the use of the Software or for any violations of this license; 6. THE UNIVERSITY OF COLORADO SUPPLIES THE SOFTWARE WITHOUT ANY WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING ANY WARRANTY OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
CU Copyright Statement:
The contents of the University of Colorado Digital Library are available for your use in research, teaching, and private study. Some of these items are protected by the U.S. Copyright Law (Title 17, U.S.C.) and some items may have additional restrictions. If you use the items in this collection, make sure you abide by any restrictions stated in the descriptive data window. The nature of these collections often makes it difficult to determine the copyright status of an item. We have made every effort to provide information about copyright owners and other restrictions in the descriptive data window. Ultimately, however, it is your responsibility to use the item according to the terms governing its use. If you are a copyright holder and the information is either not listed or listed incorrectly, please let us know so that we can update the information on our site.
Holding Institution:
University of Colorado at Boulder
Collection:
Art and Art History Visual Resources Collection
Collection info and contact:
For information about this collection, see . For specific questions, suggestions, or corrections about the descriptive data for images, contact aahvrc@colorado.edu. Please include the Image Record ID ('aahi' followed by a 7-digit number) for each image in question.