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WOLF KAHN COLOR & CONSEQUENCE
AMERINGER M c E N E RY YO H E
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CONTINUING THE CONVERSATION: Color, Space and Variation in Wolf Kahn’s Recent Work
Wolf Kahn’s recent paintings are celebratory scenes of a familiar outdoor America: quiet Maine coves, dense Vermont forests, rural views marked by wooden barns and slowly moving rivers. They are powerful statements of light and color, in which pale birch trees are made to stand out, white-hot, against flame-crimson grounds, and ponds’ still surfaces reflect the evening sky in deep lavender tones. Kahn has been a prolific painter for over 60 years, and his works collectively convey a particular vision of a countryside in countless modes: quiet, stormy, mysterious and dazzling. The appeal of Kahn’s work is far-reaching and often immediate, so directly do his approachable scenes and deft color combinations lend themselves to recognition, contemplation and straightforward optical pleasure. The undeniably “lovely” quality of Kahn’s paintings is real and intrinsic to the works’ subject matter. One senses, however, that the translation of nature’s beauty is not the only aim of these paintings, and prolonged viewing reveals that it is certainly not the central effect. It can be easy to forget, when viewing Kahn’s convincingly vivid hues, that the world does not naturally present itself in bands of vermillion and scumbles of silvery gray — that his paintings are the result of countless pictorial decisions, some lithely intuitive, others fought for and deliberate. Central to Kahn’s work is the process of perception and invention, the slow conversion of sight and thought, in color and form, through time. An equally important aspect of Kahn’s paintings is that the density of experience they convey has itself been visibly shaped by practical engagement with one of the most active periods in American painting. Just as abbreviations are linked to larger place names and single words are inseparable from their definitions, the aesthetic of Kahn’s work is bound to a uniquely individual response to the last half-century conversation about the nature, problems and possibilities of the painted form. The new paintings gathered here continue to address elemental questions of space, shape and color with rigor and understated sophistication. They are at once ambitious, compelling and complex. This past year, Kahn has worked primarily from landscapes in the Vermont area, and this show gathers works of four distinct views: a forest, a grove, a shed in the woods
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and a pond surrounded by reeds and hills. From these few motifs, Kahn has created a spectacular range of variation, in which each painting stands out in striking contrast to the next. The formal diversity generated from the economy of subjects makes it clear that, beyond the pleasing quality of the scenes, the real drama here is, at root, pictorial. Several of the new works depict, for example, a grouping of spring-leaved trees at the edge of a forest. In Pink, Yellow, Green (2010), the bright new foliage appears to play and shift against an improbable, but inviting, depth of soft alizarin. In Light Green Landscape (2009), the same figure-like trees are stacked in tones modulating from green to gray in a composition that appears congregational, even, it might be said, ascensional in nature, with one glittering shade leading upward to the next. It is a pattern that echoes the growth of trees themselves, silently stretching toward sunlight. Throughout this new body of work, we see similar elegant transformations of the subject – intimations of movement and metaphor made through seemingly simple means – in what are perhaps among the artist’s most successful paintings to date. They mark a significant achievement in what has been a truly remarkable career. Having arrived in America in 1940 at the age of 13 from war-struck Germany, Kahn spent his teenage years in New Jersey and New York. He painted at 19 as a student at the Hans Hofmann School of Fine Art. Kahn’s work gained early critical attention – he was included in New Provincetown ’47, curated by Clement Greenberg, then an emerging voice, and his first solo show in 1953 was reviewed by both Dore Ashton and Fairfield Porter. His friends, peers and teachers over the next formative decades included Larry Rivers, Elaine and Willem de Kooning, Richard Diebenkorn, Louis Finkelstein, Milton Avery and the renowned art historian Meyer Schapiro. One need only review a few dates to envision the cultural milieu in which Kahn was becoming a serious painter: In 1950, Pollock had just completed his major drip works, and de Kooning was beginning his Women series; in 1952 Harold Rosenberg published his essay “The American Action Painters,” and Greenberg’s “American-Type Painting” came out in 1955. At the risk of nostalgic simplification, it can be imagined that during these crucial years artists’ everyday conversations would turn to key questions of surface and depth, formalism vs. expressionism, and the on-again/off-again relationship of figuration to abstraction. Wolf Kahn’s responses to these questions, as expressed in his own writings and interviews, suggest those of a veteran of countless debates: one who has, after a long intellectual trajectory, allowed himself to quietly arrive at some conclusions. One is struck, when meeting the artist, by a certain cadence of clarity that informs his speech. Despite the casual, often funny, tone of Kahn’s conversation, his words are chosen with uncommon care, and key issues are often ingeniously illustrated with anecdote. In a travel memoir, Kahn writes of an exchange that once took place when he watched Fairfield Porter painting a landscape in Penobscot Bay:
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I was watching him paint a view of the Island’s “little harbour” – just a dock sticking out into deep water. He had indicated the farther islands, the water, the sky and the dock. In the foreground he painted a small gas tank and the pipes leading to it. “Fairfield,” I said, “why don’t you leave out the tank and the plumbing?” He turned to me angrily, “You don’t understand what I do at all when you speak like that. I’m not some esthetician who censors the landscape – I’m painting my field of vision. How do I know whether the stuff you don’t like isn’t what holds the whole thing together?” I respect this attitude, and to a point I share it, but it seems too rigid to apply consistently. I certainly would have kept the gas tank out.1 Aside from the admittedly delightful image of Kahn and Porter’s dockside bickering, the question the story raises is an important one: In the three-part relationship of subject/artist/painting, what are the artist’s obligations to the scene represented? Kahn’s conclusion is also distinctly characteristic of his approach – namely, that beyond all theory, the demands of the painting are paramount. It is an approach that, in Kahn’s case, can be traced to some of his earliest formal training as a student in the Hans Hofmann School. Much has been written about Kahn’s relationship to Hans Hofmann, in part because his respected teacher’s approach to painting offers a key to understanding some of the most elusive – and one could say most intrinsic – qualities of Kahn’s work. In his teaching and writing, Hofmann set out a philosophy for the appreciation and creation of the plastic arts based on a clear distinction between physical and pictorial realities, delving into the mysterious nature of the latter. Among the key tenets of Hofmann’s teaching is that the two-dimensional surface of the painting or drawing is governed by a system of forces that are purely visual in nature, and which can, given the intention of the artist, be sparked into a state of pictorial dynamism. Hofmann lays out the idea as follows: “Space must be vital and active – a force-impelled pictorial space, presented as a spiritual and unified entity, with a life of its own.”2 The authentic painting, then, in Hofmann’s view, is nothing less than “living,” and it is by this criterion that Kahn’s work is perhaps most successful. Among the most important elements in the construction of Kahn’s vital compositions is the artist’s palpable engagement with the spatial possibilities of the painted surface. In these new works, we get a clear sense of the artist’s seasoned awareness of just how expansive the world of the canvas can be. It is useful to remember that Kahn would have been taught that the relevant space of a painting is neither actual in the sense of the measurable surface area, nor illusory, referring to a perspectival appearance of depth, but rather plastic, meaning that it is able, through elements such as line, shape color and proportion, to convey a specific spatial scenario through perceptions sparked in viewing.
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Kahn, Wolf. Wolf Kahn’s America. (New York: Harry N. Abrams, Inc., 2003), 50. Hofmann, Hans. “The Search for the Real in the Visual Arts”, taken here from Hans Hofmann. ed. James Yohe. (New York: Rizzoli, 2002). 46. 9
Destroyed Woodland (2009) is a remarkable image of a forest’s visual patterns caught in a state of rhythmic disarray, and it offers a clue to Kahn’s spatial approach. Central to the canvas is a tangle of forms blocked in a succession of live-wire brush strokes that depicts a mass of damaged trees. The broken verticals of the fallen trunks become strong diagonals in an otherwise tectonic environment, pressing firmly against the top and sides of the rectangle, leading the eye in a fast-paced track around the canvas. One trunk extends from the bottom left of the painting, starting against the picture plane, then traveling toward the upper right of the canvas and into the recessive plane of soft pink sky. Another trunk forms a hard-angled dash through the deep center of the image, finishing in delicate strokes at the periphery. A third smaller diagonal line anchors the right of the canvas, setting up countless “V” formations in relation to the other trees. The linear components of this work, initially almost graphic in appearance, open through the process of viewing to a deep space where the viewer’s gaze might linger indefinitely. Above all, Kahn’s works operate dynamically through a highly original use of color. Working from pastel drawings done on-site, Kahn translates the natural palette of a given scene into highly charged counterparts of hue and tone. Kahn intuitively creates powerful color combinations that are, almost uncannily, evocative of specific times, places and moods. It is difficult to say, for example, why the violet expanse of Upper Potomac (2011), an extreme form of purple by any chromatic standard, so convincingly conveys the density of forested distance. It is here set off in opposition to a clump of grass in the lower-right and a mildly outrageous bit of lemon yellow on the left. It is through color that Kahn takes his greatest risks as a painter, creates his strongest points of visual tension and conjures his greatest rewards. Kahn’s relationship to color, even to the pigments themselves, is an intimate one – so directly does he identify with their specific suggestive powers. “Yellow,” he has said, “is the color of buttercups — and of warning signals,” tidily summing up the spectrum of emotional associations possible within variations of one hue. Kahn’s use of color is always evolving. He noted, for example, during a recent studio visit that he had only recently begun to understand new potential in the use of black. This development is evidenced in Clearing on the West (2010), which, with its hulking and ominous forms, is a refutation of the misguided impression that Kahn’s work is always bucolic in feel. The use of black is bolder still in Order in Disorder (2010), in which the pale presence of a single trunk stands out in soft radiance against the inky darks of the undergrowth shadow. In a masterful transition from light to dark, Kahn here counterintuitively balances the prominence of the white tree in the midground with a recessive shadow in the foreground, setting up the sense of ebb and flow of sunlight and shade within an always regenerating forest. Given the strengths of the abstract means used in Kahn’s work, one may ask why the artist chose not to follow the logic of this pictorial approach through to a conclusion of total
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abstraction. Kahn’s against-the-grain decision to work from the landscape is reminiscent of decisions of other artists who eschewed abstraction – Picasso’s insistence on retaining a figurative reference throughout his experimentation comes to mind, for example. In Kahn’s case, however, the decision has been one of faithfulness not just to representation, but to perception. Along with a handful of peers who felt that “the fun was in taking an object in nature and trying to make a painting out of it,”3 Kahn’s aim was to realize works in direct connection to the world. Just as the wider cultural move toward abstraction was associated with systems of philosophical and even spiritual beliefs, Kahn’s commitment to perception arises from similar concerns, arriving, however, at different answers to similar questions. Louis Finkelstein notes the role of landscape as Kahn’s subject of choice at that time: As Kahn and his colleagues looked for an art grounded in direct experience, landscape beckoned on two counts. First, it represented a common experience that needed no explanation, and secondly, it is inherently accommodating to a free, spontaneous development.4 The element of shared experience is central to Kahn’s work. He expresses wariness about the conception of a painting as representing sort of a grand, expressive gesture of the artist’s internal state. This hesitation makes sense in relation to his own work, which acts more as a meeting point between the real world and his own subjective experience. During a recent lecture, when a questioner asked why Kahn had not once mentioned his work in relation to his “self,” he replied simply, after some reflection, that in his opinion, “‘self’ is a dingy word.” A word inadequate, perhaps, to Kahn’s notion of human experience as encompassing a great deal of that which is “not-I” in addition to the “I.” Kahn’s recent paintings serve as valuable reminders of one of Hofmann’s more optimistic phrases: “Being inexhaustible, life and nature are a constant stimulus for a creative mind.” The new works are valuable as exuberant records of a painter’s curiosity, humility and wonder in the face of the natural world. They serve also as a hard-won, perennially relevant model of perceptual painting – one engaged both with the inner workings of the painted form, and the beauty and interest of our common experience. n
Christina Kee New York, 2011
Finkelstein, Louis. “The Development of Wolf Kahn’s Painting Language”. Taken here from Wolf Kahn, ed. Justin Spring. (New York: Harry N. Abrams, Inc. 1996) 101. 4. Ibid., 100. 3.
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Pale Dawn 14
Destroyed Woodland 16
Order in Disorder 18
Tending Toward Silver 20
Complex 22
Green, Gray & White 24
Red Rise with Gray Trees 26
Light Green Landscape 28
Silvery Grove 30
Green, Pink + Yellow 32
Gray Barn 34
Spring 36
Pink, Yellow, Green 38
Orange Fantasia 40
Green Declivity 42
Growing out of Orange 44
Blue Puddle 46
Clearing on the West 48
Purple Pond 50
Spring Tree Tangle 52
White Trunks 54
Green Saturation 56
Landscape with Artificial Greens 58
Upper Potomac 60
Midsummer Madness 62
Celebrating Green 64
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Plate List
Pale Dawn, 2008 oil on canvas 52 x 66 inches
Gray Barn, 2010 oil on canvas 52 x 60 inches
Spring Tree Tangle, 2010 oil on canvas 52 x 76 inches
Destroyed Woodland, 2009 oil on canvas 52 x 56 1/4 inches
Spring, 2010 oil on canvas 52 x 72 inches
White Trunks, 2011 oil on canvas 52 x 68 1/2 inches
Order in Disorder, 2010 oil on canvas 52 1/2 x 66 inches
Pink, Yellow, Green, 2010 oil on canvas 52 x 40 inches
Green Saturation, 2011 oil on canvas 52 x 72 inches
Tending Toward Silver, 2007 oil on canvas 68 x 52 inches
Orange Fantasia, 2010 oil on canvas 44 x 52 inches
Landscape with Artificial Greens, 2011 oil on canvas 64 x 84 inches
Complex, 2009 oil on canvas 52 x 68 inches
Green Declivity, 2009 oil on canvas 28 x 42 inches
Upper Potomac, 2011 oil on canvas 52 x 60 inches
Green, Gray & White, 2009 oil on canvas 64 x 84 inches
Growing out of Orange, 2010 oil on canvas 28 x 28 inches
Midsummer Madness, 2011 oil on canvas 52 x 66 inches
Red Rise with Gray Trees, 2009 oil on canvas 52 x 60 inches
Blue Puddle, 2010 oil on canvas 32 x 40 inches
Celebrating Green, 2011 oil on canvas 52 x 66 inches
Light Green Landscape, 2009 oil on canvas 64 x 52 inches
Clearing on the West, 2010 oil on canvas 42 x 52 inches
Silvery Grove, 2009 oil on canvas 52 x 64 inches
Purple Pond, 2010 oil on canvas 52 x 42 inches
Green, Pink + Yellow, 2010 oil on canvas 44 x 52 inches
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SELECTED PUBLIC COLLECTIONS
Arkansas Arts Center, Little Rock, Arkansas
Mint Museum of Art, Charlotte, North Carolina
Arts Club of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Massachusetts
Asheville Art Museum, Asheville, North Carolina
Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, Texas
Brooklyn Museum, Brooklyn, New York
Museum of Modern Art, New York, New York
Carnegie Mellon Institute, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
National Academy of Design, New York, New York
Cheekwood Museum of Art and Gardens, Nashville, Tennessee
National Museum of American Art, Washington, D.C.
Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, Ohio
Neuberger Museum of Art, Purchase College, State University of New York, Purchase, New York
Columbus Museum of Art, Columbus, Ohio New Jersey Center for Visual Arts, Summit, New Jersey Dallas Museum of Art, Dallas, Texas New Orleans Museum of Art, New Orleans, Louisiana Dartmouth College, Hood Museum, Hanover, New Hampshire El Paso Museum of Art, El Paso, Texas
Palmer Museum of Art, Pennsylvania State University, State College, Pennsylvania
Fort Worth Community Arts Center, Fort Worth, Texas
Robert Hull Fleming Museum, University of Vermont, Burlington, Vermont
Heckscher Museum, Huntington, New York
The Rose Art Museum of Brandeis University, Waltham, Massachusetts
Hickory Museum of Art, Hickory, North Carolina
Saint Louis Art Museum, St. Louis, Missouri
Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, D.C.
San Diego Museum of Art, San Diego, California
The Jewish Museum, New York, New York
Sheldon Memorial Art Gallery at the University of Nebraska Lincoln, Nebraska Art Association, Lincoln, Nebraska
Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art, Kansas City, Missouri Springfield Museum of Fine Arts, Springfield, Massachusetts Krannert Art Museum, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Champaign, Illinois
The University of California, Berkeley Art Museum, Berkeley, California
Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles, California
Utah Museum of Fine Arts, Salt Lake City, Utah
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, New York
Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Richmond, Virginia
Michigan State University Museum, East Lansing, Michigan
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, New York
Milwaukee Art Museum, Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Williams College Museum of Art, Williamstown, Massachusetts
Minnesota Museum of American Art, St. Paul, Minnesota
Worcester Art Museum, Worcester, Massachusetts
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WOLF KAHN
Published on the occasion of the exhibition
AMERINGER M c E N E RY YO H E
COLOR & CONSEQUENCE 2 June – 16 July 2011 Ameringer | McEnery | Yohe 525 West 22nd Street New York, NY 10011 tel: 212 445 0051 www.amy-nyc.com
Essay © Christina Kee Publication © 2011 Ameringer | McEnery | Yohe All rights reserved Catalogue designed by Hannah Alderfer, HHA Design Printed by Capital Offset, Concord, NH Printed and bound in the USA Photography: Thomas Powel Imaging, Inc. ISBN: 978-0-9820810-6-8
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