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Published 10/04/02
Gerhard Richter: forty years of painting,
Museum of Modern Art, New York
14 February 200221 May 2002.
The enigma of the German painter Gerhard
Richter (b.1932) is finally explored through Robert Storrs
grand exhibition this spring in New York. Richter as a painter can
now be taken to epitomise the transformation of painting in the
second half of the 20th century. His diverse, brilliantly accomplished
technical range of development over four decades should not be allowed
to detract from his intellectual achievement in bringing the recovery
of painting to a pitch of justifiable validity at the beginning
of the 21st century. The l88 paintings on show at the Museum of
Modern Art finally reveal the breadth of experimentation pursued
by Richter over the decades; his struggle to relate painting meaningfully
to the exponential growth of modern society and culture, while all
the time this effected, enveloped and ultimately breached traditional
ideas about painting.
It is curious to note, writing back in London, the general paucity in the British
art world of coverage on this European master of the late 20th century. In contrast,
this journal praised Richter early on, in l965, and reviewed his work again
in September l972 following that summers Biennale while still perplexing
the established critics. The article presciently acknowledged how Richter had
consolidated his international reputation as a painter. For a decade Richter
had striven to resolve the question of the nature of reality, mistrusting all
ideologies, aware now of the challenging potential of new media and materials
exploited by others such as Yves Klein and also Manzoni. But Richter had already
drawn upon his traditional painterly skill to resolve anew the question of the
nature of reality, mistrusting ready-made solutions or the appropriations of
Pop art. He found he could, as a painter must, express that concrete reality
in terms of light itself. As early as l962 he had been experimenting with meticulous
painted renderings of fleeting photograhic images and blurred copies of snapshots.
But it was not until l991, at the Tate Gallery, that Sean Rainbird had organised
his retrospective there, preceded by Richters Mirrors shown
at the Anthony dOffay Gallery. This was after Richter had participated
in the 1982 Berlin Zeitgeist exhibition, in the company of Baselitz,
Beuys, Clemente, Gilbert and George, Immendorf, Kiefer, Morley, Merz, Penck,
Polk and Stella. Richter had been celebrated for two decades before London conceded
his importance. Richter was about nothing if not the spirit of the time.
Born in Dresden, Richter survived the Nazi period and the Dresden firestorm
(visible from where the family had been accommodated some 100km away). In the
prevalent German regime which followed he used the sound traditional art education
available to become a poster artist. But he gravitated from Dresden to Dusseldorf
as strictures were lessened, via a spell as a visiting lecturer at the Hochschule
für Bildende Kunst in Hamburg, and as an art teacher at Dusseldorf high
school before, in l971, joining Josef Beuys as a professor at the Dusseldorf
Academy. In l961, just after Andy Warhol had embarked on his Popey canvases
and Dick Tracy, Richter had a stroke of good luck. Returning from Moscow his
train stopped unexpectedly in west Berlin. Quick-wittedly Richter dropped off
his luggage there, then was driven back there from Dresden with his wife by
a friend, crossing on the subway to west Berlin to retrieve it and gain freedom.
In l966 Richter wrote, I consider many photographs better than Cezanne.
A typically unpremeditated painting from such a photograph is Mustang
squadron (l964), which bears no message, carries in its content no immediately
apparent significance, other than that Richter, three years free, could paint
American aircraft in British markings, ignoring the still unhealed social scars
of Nazi wartime conflict so apparent in west German society of the early l960s.
Here, Richter asserts the legitimacy of the artist copying the swooping fighters
against a verdant green pattern of fields. There are also similar Richter paintings
of U.S. wartime, and, later, NATO bombers, as well as paintings of wartime German
Stuka divebombers. Richter is stating his freedom, almost to disengage from
the political climate engendering such subjects, in pursuit of an independent
realism.
Townscape Madrid (l968) is likewise one of a group of seemingly
random cityscapes where Richter addresses architectural or urban patterns detachedly,
yet with a semblance of Manet with a light historical referencing:
in a deadpan, flatly-shaded complexity, the postcard-like homogeneity of the
over-view of Madrid street intersections still conveys some nondescript intensity
of human activity, yet the scale chosen is too small to show people. Here, Richters
grisaille technique as a tool for blurring imagery is only evident
in a generalised sense. But soon, as a part of his apparatus for maintaining
some balance between painted objective detachment and subjective disengagement
he increasingly deploys this technique. So by the time of the l972 Venice Biennale,
Dieter Honisch in the catalogue could rightly claim:
The role of the picture as a medium for personal communication was
denied and painting was now led towards the registration of reality.
Richter recognised early that painting during this phase of objectivity
could be justified not by personal inspiration but only by reality
itself. Thus he arrived at photography: the absolute and two-dimensional
representation of reality.
Here, Richters 48 portraits, ranging from Jose Ortega y
Gasset through Paul Valery, Kafka, Graham Greene, to Oscar Wilde
and Andre Gide served both to perplex and surprise critics who
were already claiming that painting was dead. Instead, they had
experienced for the first time the deconstruction of the art of
painting by Richter, if only to reconstruct the medium with greater
validity and meaning in terms of their contemporary reality. Heiner
Stachelhaus, writing in Studio International at that time,
commented on how amply Richter had succeeded:
because he recognised that the fundamentally realistic qualities of photography
could be used as the basis for art, no matter how banal the photographs to be
copied were
the photograph and the artistic manipulation of it was something
decidedly different from the creation of a painting in the traditional way,
made according to the autonomous laws of painting.
Richter had in fact shocked the Biennale traditionalists, not so much by the
superlativeness of his technical exposition, although that was formidable, as
by finding, in this way, a new but freer objectivity than the general cult of
personal inspiration allowed at that time. Photography as source material thus
enabled Richter to achieve anonymity and objectivity together.
I do not blur any pictures to make a representation seem more artistic
through lack of clarity as to give my style an individual note. Richter
had said at the time, I rather equalise, neutralise what is depicted,
attempt to retain the anonymous gloss of the photograph, to replace the craftsmanly-artistic
with the technical. Increasingly, Richter has succeeded in dismissing
formal positioning as such. He deliberately diffuses the line that separates
art from life. Yet he is by the same token cunning enough not to try to erase
all doubt, even with photographs about the nature of that reality. Richter pursues
always that which cannot be fully explained. In the widening versatility of
his work since that Venice display, Richter showed a growing versatility that
confounded the majority of critics, yet even those who were amazed at the originality
of Richter's approach could not possibly have conceived of what was still to
come.
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