Details
- Dimensions
- 30ʺW × 2ʺD × 24ʺH
- Styles
- Pop Art
- Art Subjects
- Abstract
- Frame Type
- Unframed
- Period
- 1990s
- Item Type
- Vintage, Antique or Pre-owned
Shop Sustainably with Chairish
- Materials
- Acrylic
- Canvas
- Condition
- Good Condition, Unknown, Some Imperfections
- Color
- Blue
- Condition Notes
- Good Good less
- Description
-
"New York artist Robert Reitzfeld has a devoted cult following, but his paintings are not nearly as well known as …
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"New York artist Robert Reitzfeld has a devoted cult following, but his paintings are not nearly as well known as they ought to be....The paintings show a witty merger of Pop art idioms and post-painterly abstraction, like a mutant blend of John Wesley, Michael Bevilacqua and Gerhard Richter. In each of the exuberant compositions, Reitzfeld offers a unique balance of formalist elements and absurdist drama."
from David Ebony's Top Ten @ Artnet
At first, Robert Reitzfeld's distinctive melange of Ab Ex. Pop, Op and other postwar painting styles appears to be a send-up of the source material. Among the 25 recent paintings and works on paper in this show, a number of pieces, including Minnie Mouse, Olive. Che. Marilyn and others, feature cartoons and familiar Pop-art iconography, Reitzfeld's versions often appropriating passages from Warhol and Lichtenstein. But Reitzfeld's images are very often fragmented, with roughly torn edges in the paper pieces and colorful abstract passages of paint in the canvases obscuring and sometimes rearly obliterating the subjects. Rather than a nihilistic gesture, however, his distortions may be viewed as a kind of archeology of recent art. They also reveal a rather personal relationship with specific works that have inspired the veteran New York artist over the years.
1961, I Was There (2007), for instance, Is a painting featuring Donald Duck in his blue-and-white sailor suit—a fragment of Lichtenstein's 1961 painting Look, Mickey!, partly painted over with layered patches of red and pink acrylic as well as a sprinkling of glitter. The title of Reitzfeld's piece alludes to his attendance at a 1961 opening at New York's Sidney Janis Gallery, where Lichtenstein showed this seminal Pop work.
Reitzfeld is at his best here in several relatively large (about 36 inches square) intricate hard-edge compositions, such as TBT 56 (Marriage), 2006, and T8T 63 (2007). The latter contains another Lichtenstein reference: a detail of the Whitney Museum's 1973 Still Life with Crystal Bowl set in a crazy quilt of abstract patterns and swirling designs. Despite its high-tech look, this elaborate composition was created without the aid of computer programs. In TBT 56 (Marriage), one of the most striking works on view, the artist puts Warhol's Campbell's soup can through a similar kind of image shredder. Enmeshed in a colorful network of patterns that suggest late Matisse collages and Bridget Riley paintings, as well as certain 1980s Pattern and Decoration works, the soup can's trademark label appears to glow from within an infinite and elusive space. David Ebony, Art in America.
Exhibits: One Person Shows
"Mr. & Mrs."-Sechrest Gallery @ Highpoint University, North Carolina
John Davis Gallery, Hudson, NY
Carriage House-John Davis Gallery, Hudson, NY
Daiwa Gallery Gifu City, Japan
“Landskapes” 473 Gallery, New York
Berliner Kunstprojekt, Berlin, Germany
Bazzini, New York
Anita Friedman Fine Arts, New York
Davis & Hall, Hudson, New York
Where Fashion Meets Art-Moschino, NewYork
Lauren Wittels, New York
Northrop Corp., Los Angeles, Ca.
Jill Silverman Fine Art, New York
Diane Brown Gallery, New York
Selected Group Shows
“Who Loves You Baby” / Luther W. Brady Gallery @ George Washington University, Washington, DC
“Group”- Anita Friedman Fine Arts, New York
Benefit Show & Auction- School of Visual Arts
“What I’d Rather Be Doing”- The One Club Gallery, New York
“Ab-Rep”- Anita Friedman Fine Arts, New York
“Group Show”- Synagogue For The Arts, New York
AAF Contemporary Art Fair/Richard Levy Gallery
“Group Show”- Segalas Gallery, Bernardsville, NJ
“Group Show”- Nix Gallery, New York
“Abstract Space”- Anita Friedman Fine Arts, New York
Roxi’s Pocket Art Galleries- Hamburg, Germany
“Strong Modern”- Williamsburg Art & Historical Center, New York
“Small Works” - 80 Washington Sq. Gallery, New York
XX Anniversary Benefit - New Museum of Contemporary Art, New York
“SCRATCH” - Thread Waxing Space, New York
“No Common Denominator”- Sylvia White Gallery, New York
“Artists Among Us”- The Art Directors Club, New York
Creative Time Benefit - Gagosian Gallery, New York
“Works on Paper” - Nancy Solomon Gallery, Atlanta, Ga.
“Office” - Nancy Solomon Gallery, Atlanta, Ga.
XVI Anniversary - The New Museum of Contemporary Art, New York
“Discoveries”- Triplex Gallery, New York
“Life Review”- The Arsenal Gallery, New York less
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