fbpx
Wikipedia

Rudolf Stingel

Rudolf Stingel (born 1956) is an artist based in New York City.

Stingel was born in Merano, Italy. His work engages the audience in dialogue about their perception of art[1] and uses Conceptual painting and installations to explore the process of creation.[2] Using readily available materials such as styrofoam, carpet, and cast polyurethane, Stingel creates art based upon an underlying conceptual framework and challenges contemporary notions about painting. The surfaces of his two-dimensional works are characteristically carved out, imprinted or indented, visibly evidencing the artist's alteration of industrial matter.[3] He lives in New York and Merano, Italy.[4]

Work edit

Stingel became first recognised in the late 1980s for his monochromatic works, silvery paintings with undertones of red, yellow or blue from 1987 to 1994. Stingel's later abstract paintings from the 1990s consist of oils in pure, brilliant colors exuberantly splayed, dripped, pressed, and pulled across a black field.[5] The works begin with the application of a thick layer of paint in a particular colour to the canvas. Pieces of gauze are then placed over the surface of the canvas and silver paint is added using a spray gun. Finally, the gauze is removed, resulting in a richly textured surface.[6]

 
Rudolf Stingel, Untitled, 1998, oil and enamel on paper, 41+34 by 29+58 inches (1,060 mm × 750 mm)

In the late 1980s, Stingel began a series of works on paper using a technique of applying oil and enamel paint onto paper through a tulle screen to create monochrome paintings with texture and fine patterning (see Untitled, 1998, oil and enamel on paper).[7][8] At the Venice Biennale in 1989, he published an illustrated “do-it-yourself” manual in English, Italian, German, French, Spanish and Japanese, 'Instructions, Istruzioni, Anleitung...', outlining the equipment and procedure that would enable anyone to create one of his paintings.[9] In so doing, he suggests that everyone could produce a work of abstraction by following a simple set of instructions.

In the early 1990s, Stingel created a series of radiator sculptures made of translucent cast resin in which orange acrylic paint was poured during the casting process. Installed like ordinary radiators, the works nevertheless disallow their identification to a purely utilitarian object through their marbled ember-like glow.[10] Also in the early 1990s, Stingel started his inquiry into the relationship between painting and space by developing a series of installations that covered the walls and floors of exhibition spaces with monochrome or black and white carpets, transforming the architecture into a painting.[11] In 1993, he exhibited a huge plush orange carpet glued to the wall at the Venice Biennale.[12] In his site-specific Plan B (2004), he covered the entire floors of Grand Central Terminal’s Vanderbilt Hall and the Walker Art Center with an industrially-printed pink and blue floral carpet.[13] Simultaneously in Frankfurt am Main, Stingel completely resurfaced one of the rooms of the Museum für Moderne Kunst – walls, columns and floor – with bright red and silver insulation panels printed with a traditional damask wallpaper motif.[12] During the 2013 Venice Biennale, he covered the Palazzo Grassi with his own Persian-inspired carpeting on which he hung his abstract and Photo Realist paintings.[14]

In other installations, he covered the walls with silver metallic Celotex insulation board and invited visitors to mark them as they wished: at the 2003 Venice Biennale Stingel created a silver room inside the Italian pavilion.[15] As part of his 2007 mid-career retrospective at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago and at the Whitney Museum of American Art, the artist covered the gallery walls with metallic Celotex insulation board[13] and invited visitors to draw, write and make imprints on the surface of the softly reflective silver panelling, effectively removing artistic privilege from the mark of the individual and handing it over to the collective gestures of thousands of viewers.[16] His paintings from that period are often created through a performative process in which Stingel covers the entire floor of his studio with Styrofoam and then walks across the thick surface in boots dipped in lacquer thinner. The Styrofoam melts with each of Stingel's steps leaving behind only the markings of a footprint. The final work is then arranged in single, double or as in this case a monumentous four panels taken from the much larger field of panels that covered the entire studio floor.[17]

Starting with his portrait of gallerist Paula Cooper (Untitled, 2005), Stingel has been embarking on a series of paintings based on photographic portraits, all taken by other photographers (e.g. Robert Mapplethorpe).[18] Stingel's next engagement with photography arrived as a series of black-and-white self-portraits painted in 2006 [“Untitled (After Sam),” 2005-06], all painted after photographs taken by the artist Sam Samore.[18] They are executed in a gray-scale palette to match black and white photos. He depicted himself at various stages of his life, in a melancholy state, a mid-life crisis, and one as a much younger man dressed in an army uniform.[11] The photographs were shown together with vast abstract canvases of markings constituted solely by the traces of time and action in the studio.[19]

First exhibited in “Rudolf Stingel. LIVE” at Neue Nationalgalerie, Berlin in 2010, a series of immense landscape paintings measuring up to fifteen feet in width is based on vintage black-and-white photographs of Stingel's birthplace, Merano, in the Tyrolean Alps.[19]

Stingel has collaborated with fellow artist Urs Fischer on several occasions.

Exhibitions edit

Stingel has participated in the 1999 and 2003 Venice Biennales. His work was the subject of a mid-career retrospective called Rudolf Stingel and was organized by the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago. It was exhibited at the MCA and at the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, in 2007. In his first solo museum exhibition in the United States, Stingel lined the MCA's three-story atrium space, and a gallery space at the Whitney, with an aluminum-faced installation and suspended an ornate chandelier from the ceiling. The public was invited to scratch messages and images into the soft walls.[20]

Art market edit

Stingel's prices skyrocketed after his 2007 show at the Whitney Museum in New York, until a big Styrofoam board fetched $1.9 million at Phillips de Pury & Company. Between February 2007 and March 2009, 56 of his works appeared at auction—more than double the quantity offered over the entire previous decade.[21] At a Christie's New York auction in 2015, Stingel's Untitled (1993), part of his series of silver paintings, sold for the artist at $4,757,000.[22] On May 17, 2017, at Christies Post-War and Contemporary Art Evening Sale, Stingel's "Untitled (for Sam)" at an auction high for the artist at $10,551,500.

Recognition edit

In 2008, Stingel received second place for Best Monographic Museum Show Nationally by the U.S. Art Critics Association for the 2006–07 season.[23]

References edit

  1. ^ MCAChicago.org 2007-10-29 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ Whitney.org
  3. ^ Rudolf Stingel: New Styrofoam Works, April 22 - June 9, 2000 Paula Cooper Gallery, New York.
  4. ^ Rudolf Stingel Selected Exhibitions
  5. ^ Rudolf Stingel, January 15 - February 22, 1997 Paula Cooper Gallery, New York.
  6. ^ Rudolf Stingel, Untitled (1998) Christie's Post-War & Contemporary Art Day Sale, 21 October 2008, London.
  7. ^ Cooper, Paula (May 3, 2008). "Rudolf Stingel – Works on Paper". paulacoopergallery.com. Retrieved May 13, 2022.
  8. ^ Rudolf Stingel: Works on Paper, May 3 - June 7, 2008 Paula Cooper Gallery, New York.
  9. ^ Rudolf Stingel, September 8 - October 9, 2004 Sadie Coles HQ, London
  10. ^ Eight Sculptors 2012, November 10 - December 22, 2012 Paula Cooper Gallery, New York.
  11. ^ a b Rudolf Stingel, March 4 - April 16, 2011 Gagosian Gallery, New York.
  12. ^ a b Amanda Coulson (October 2004), Rudolf Stingel Frieze.
  13. ^ a b Rudolf Stingel, February 20 - March 21, 2009 Paula Cooper Gallery, New York.
  14. ^ Carol Vogel (June 2, 2013), Ripples of Rumination New York Times.
  15. ^ "Sadie Coles HQ".
  16. ^ Rudolf Stingel, Untitled (1993) Tate, London.
  17. ^ RUDOLF STINGEL, Untitled (2000) Phillips de Pury & Company, London.
  18. ^ a b Gary Murayari (October 2008), Rudolf Stingel: Moving Pictures Flash Art.
  19. ^ a b Rudolf Stingel, March 4 - April 19, 2014 Gagosian Gallery, New York.
  20. ^ Michelle Grabner (2010-10-16). "Rudolf Stingel". Frieze Magazine. Retrieved 2011-06-13.
  21. ^ Katya Kazakina (March 18, 2009), Stingel’s $200,000 Saints Trade on Golden Brand Name: Hot Art Bloomberg News.
  22. ^ Rudolf Stingel, Untitled (1993) Christie's Post-War and Contemporary Art Evening Sale, 13 May 2015, New York.
  23. ^ Rudolf Stingel, November 10 - December 22, 2017 Gagosian Gallery.

External links edit

  • Jerry Saltz, The Icon and the Iconoclast, ArtNet.com
  • Rudolf Stingel on ArtNet.com
  • Michelle Grabner, Rudolf Stingel at MCA Chicago, Friexe.com
  • Images, biography, texts from the Saatchi Gallery
  • Reportage video di Canale Arte della mostra a Palazzo Grassi di Venezia [1]

rudolf, stingel, born, 1956, artist, based, york, city, stingel, born, merano, italy, work, engages, audience, dialogue, about, their, perception, uses, conceptual, painting, installations, explore, process, creation, using, readily, available, materials, such. Rudolf Stingel born 1956 is an artist based in New York City Stingel was born in Merano Italy His work engages the audience in dialogue about their perception of art 1 and uses Conceptual painting and installations to explore the process of creation 2 Using readily available materials such as styrofoam carpet and cast polyurethane Stingel creates art based upon an underlying conceptual framework and challenges contemporary notions about painting The surfaces of his two dimensional works are characteristically carved out imprinted or indented visibly evidencing the artist s alteration of industrial matter 3 He lives in New York and Merano Italy 4 Contents 1 Work 2 Exhibitions 3 Art market 4 Recognition 5 References 6 External linksWork editStingel became first recognised in the late 1980s for his monochromatic works silvery paintings with undertones of red yellow or blue from 1987 to 1994 Stingel s later abstract paintings from the 1990s consist of oils in pure brilliant colors exuberantly splayed dripped pressed and pulled across a black field 5 The works begin with the application of a thick layer of paint in a particular colour to the canvas Pieces of gauze are then placed over the surface of the canvas and silver paint is added using a spray gun Finally the gauze is removed resulting in a richly textured surface 6 nbsp Rudolf Stingel Untitled 1998 oil and enamel on paper 41 3 4 by 29 5 8 inches 1 060 mm 750 mm In the late 1980s Stingel began a series of works on paper using a technique of applying oil and enamel paint onto paper through a tulle screen to create monochrome paintings with texture and fine patterning see Untitled 1998 oil and enamel on paper 7 8 At the Venice Biennale in 1989 he published an illustrated do it yourself manual in English Italian German French Spanish and Japanese Instructions Istruzioni Anleitung outlining the equipment and procedure that would enable anyone to create one of his paintings 9 In so doing he suggests that everyone could produce a work of abstraction by following a simple set of instructions In the early 1990s Stingel created a series of radiator sculptures made of translucent cast resin in which orange acrylic paint was poured during the casting process Installed like ordinary radiators the works nevertheless disallow their identification to a purely utilitarian object through their marbled ember like glow 10 Also in the early 1990s Stingel started his inquiry into the relationship between painting and space by developing a series of installations that covered the walls and floors of exhibition spaces with monochrome or black and white carpets transforming the architecture into a painting 11 In 1993 he exhibited a huge plush orange carpet glued to the wall at the Venice Biennale 12 In his site specific Plan B 2004 he covered the entire floors of Grand Central Terminal s Vanderbilt Hall and the Walker Art Center with an industrially printed pink and blue floral carpet 13 Simultaneously in Frankfurt am Main Stingel completely resurfaced one of the rooms of the Museum fur Moderne Kunst walls columns and floor with bright red and silver insulation panels printed with a traditional damask wallpaper motif 12 During the 2013 Venice Biennale he covered the Palazzo Grassi with his own Persian inspired carpeting on which he hung his abstract and Photo Realist paintings 14 In other installations he covered the walls with silver metallic Celotex insulation board and invited visitors to mark them as they wished at the 2003 Venice Biennale Stingel created a silver room inside the Italian pavilion 15 As part of his 2007 mid career retrospective at the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago and at the Whitney Museum of American Art the artist covered the gallery walls with metallic Celotex insulation board 13 and invited visitors to draw write and make imprints on the surface of the softly reflective silver panelling effectively removing artistic privilege from the mark of the individual and handing it over to the collective gestures of thousands of viewers 16 His paintings from that period are often created through a performative process in which Stingel covers the entire floor of his studio with Styrofoam and then walks across the thick surface in boots dipped in lacquer thinner The Styrofoam melts with each of Stingel s steps leaving behind only the markings of a footprint The final work is then arranged in single double or as in this case a monumentous four panels taken from the much larger field of panels that covered the entire studio floor 17 Starting with his portrait of gallerist Paula Cooper Untitled 2005 Stingel has been embarking on a series of paintings based on photographic portraits all taken by other photographers e g Robert Mapplethorpe 18 Stingel s next engagement with photography arrived as a series of black and white self portraits painted in 2006 Untitled After Sam 2005 06 all painted after photographs taken by the artist Sam Samore 18 They are executed in a gray scale palette to match black and white photos He depicted himself at various stages of his life in a melancholy state a mid life crisis and one as a much younger man dressed in an army uniform 11 The photographs were shown together with vast abstract canvases of markings constituted solely by the traces of time and action in the studio 19 First exhibited in Rudolf Stingel LIVE at Neue Nationalgalerie Berlin in 2010 a series of immense landscape paintings measuring up to fifteen feet in width is based on vintage black and white photographs of Stingel s birthplace Merano in the Tyrolean Alps 19 Stingel has collaborated with fellow artist Urs Fischer on several occasions Exhibitions editStingel has participated in the 1999 and 2003 Venice Biennales His work was the subject of a mid career retrospective called Rudolf Stingel and was organized by the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago It was exhibited at the MCA and at the Whitney Museum of American Art New York in 2007 In his first solo museum exhibition in the United States Stingel lined the MCA s three story atrium space and a gallery space at the Whitney with an aluminum faced installation and suspended an ornate chandelier from the ceiling The public was invited to scratch messages and images into the soft walls 20 Art market editStingel s prices skyrocketed after his 2007 show at the Whitney Museum in New York until a big Styrofoam board fetched 1 9 million at Phillips de Pury amp Company Between February 2007 and March 2009 56 of his works appeared at auction more than double the quantity offered over the entire previous decade 21 At a Christie s New York auction in 2015 Stingel s Untitled 1993 part of his series of silver paintings sold for the artist at 4 757 000 22 On May 17 2017 at Christies Post War and Contemporary Art Evening Sale Stingel s Untitled for Sam at an auction high for the artist at 10 551 500 Recognition editIn 2008 Stingel received second place for Best Monographic Museum Show Nationally by the U S Art Critics Association for the 2006 07 season 23 References edit MCAChicago org Archived 2007 10 29 at the Wayback Machine Whitney org Rudolf Stingel New Styrofoam Works April 22 June 9 2000 Paula Cooper Gallery New York Rudolf Stingel Selected Exhibitions Rudolf Stingel January 15 February 22 1997 Paula Cooper Gallery New York Rudolf Stingel Untitled 1998 Christie s Post War amp Contemporary Art Day Sale 21 October 2008 London Cooper Paula May 3 2008 Rudolf Stingel Works on Paper paulacoopergallery com Retrieved May 13 2022 Rudolf Stingel Works on Paper May 3 June 7 2008 Paula Cooper Gallery New York Rudolf Stingel September 8 October 9 2004 Sadie Coles HQ London Eight Sculptors 2012 November 10 December 22 2012 Paula Cooper Gallery New York a b Rudolf Stingel March 4 April 16 2011 Gagosian Gallery New York a b Amanda Coulson October 2004 Rudolf Stingel Frieze a b Rudolf Stingel February 20 March 21 2009 Paula Cooper Gallery New York Carol Vogel June 2 2013 Ripples of Rumination New York Times Sadie Coles HQ Rudolf Stingel Untitled 1993 Tate London RUDOLF STINGEL Untitled 2000 Phillips de Pury amp Company London a b Gary Murayari October 2008 Rudolf Stingel Moving Pictures Flash Art a b Rudolf Stingel March 4 April 19 2014 Gagosian Gallery New York Michelle Grabner 2010 10 16 Rudolf Stingel Frieze Magazine Retrieved 2011 06 13 Katya Kazakina March 18 2009 Stingel s 200 000 Saints Trade on Golden Brand Name Hot Art Bloomberg News Rudolf Stingel Untitled 1993 Christie s Post War and Contemporary Art Evening Sale 13 May 2015 New York Rudolf Stingel November 10 December 22 2017 Gagosian Gallery External links editJerry Saltz The Icon and the Iconoclast ArtNet com Rudolf Stingel on ArtNet com Michelle Grabner Rudolf Stingel at MCA Chicago Friexe com Images biography texts from the Saatchi Gallery Reportage video di Canale Arte della mostra a Palazzo Grassi di Venezia 1 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rudolf Stingel amp oldid 1215409306, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.