> DESCRIPTION
Paul Kasmin Gallery is pleased to announce its upcoming exhibition
STRANGE WORLD, an eclectic collection of Andy Warhol's blotted-line
drawings created between 1948 and 1959. A separate exhibition, A
PRIVATE DRAWING BOOK, will feature twelve of Warhol's handsome
pen-and-ink drawings at 511 West 27th Street.
In STRANGE WORLD, Warhol's preference for the deliberately incomplete
or unresolved image coupled with unpredictable trajectories of color
evoke palpable tensions of presence and absence and push the
fragmentary nature of Warhol's signature broken line technique to the
point of near abstraction. A familiar cast from Warhol's commercial art
and illustrated books--friends, lovers, small children, and the
anonymous faces of office workers--are presented in concert with
charged paper surfaces. The experimental nature of the work is evident
as is the presence of the artist's hand. Large areas of color, either
amorphous marbled oil or broadly painted applications of gouache
challenge the delicate, broken contours of either a solitary figure or
an intimate grouping. Warhol, who regularly deployed eccentric
perspectives in his graphic work, also seeks new means of visual entry
into the image. When he abandons the center of the pictorial field and
places the figure along the paper's margins, the result is a
provocative scenario in which the body's faint outline yields to the
dynamic intensity of the ground.
In some drawings, the freely applied color overlaps or even overwhelms
the figure, creating a surreal sense of dislocation and irrationality.
For others, color adheres to contour, but the figures themselves and
their intentions remain ambiguously defined. Interactions between the
figures, however, are rendered with Warhol's signature attentiveness to
the pictorial expressiveness of the outlined body. The touch of hands
and tentative smiles suggest, if not a complete story, a tender,
hopeful mood. Telling details, like Homberg hats and Peter Pan collars,
historically place the figures within the conservative confines of the
Eisenhower era. But the repeated motif of two men on the point of a
kiss underscores the complex psychological territory Warhol approached
through his graphic explorations.
STRANGE WORLD features some of Warhol's most intriguing and inventive
works on paper and show Warhol, a committed draftsman, extending the
artistic and expressive range of his distinctive graphic line. The
result is a body of work that is eerie, compelling, and revelatory.