Английская Википедия:Glenn Brown (artist)

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Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Use British English Шаблон:Use dmy dates Шаблон:Infobox artist Glenn Brown Шаблон:Post-nominals (born 1966 in Hexham, Northumberland) is a British contemporary artist known for the use of appropriation in his paintings. Starting with reproductions from other artists' works, Glenn Brown transforms the appropriated image by changing its colour, position, orientation, height and width relationship, mood and/or size. Despite these changes, he has occasionally been accused of plagiarism.

He has had a number of solo exhibitions: at the Serpentine Gallery in London in 2004,[1] at the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna in 2008,[2] at Tate Liverpool in 2009[3] (later shown at the Fondazione Sandretto Re Rebaudengo in Turin),[4] at the Ludwig Múzeum in Budapest in 2010,[5] at the Fondation Vincent Van Gogh in Arles, in Provence, in 2016 [6] and at the Landesmuseum and Sprengel Museum in Hanover in 2023. [7][8]

Brown currently resides and works in London and Suffolk, England. He was nominated for the Turner Prize in 2000. However, his exhibition at Tate Britain for the Turner Prize sparked some controversy, as one of his paintings was found to be closely based on the science-fiction illustration "Double Star" created by the artist Tony Roberts in 1973.[9]

He was appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in the 2019 Birthday Honours for services to art.[10]

Brown opened his own museum in October 2022 named The Brown Collection in Marylebone, London.[11]

Education

Brown completed his Foundation Course at Norwich School of Art & Design (1985) and later received a B.A. degree in Fine Art at Bath School of Art and Design (1985–1988) and an M.A. degree at Goldsmiths College (1990–1992).[12]

Technique and style

Файл:'The Real Thing' (2000) Glenn Brown.jpg
'The Real Thing' (2000) Oil on panel, 82 x 66.5 cm

Brown appropriates images by living, working artists, such as Frank Auerbach and Georg Baselitz, as well as paintings by historical artists, such as Guido Reni, Diego Velázquez, Anthony van Dyck, Rembrandt, Jean-Honoré Fragonard, Eugène Delacroix, John Martin, Gustave Courbet, Adolph Menzel, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Vincent van Gogh, Chaïm Soutine and Salvador Dalí. He claims that the references to these artists are not direct quotations, but alterations and combinations of several works by different artists,[13] although the artists whose work is appropriated do not always agree.[14] Art critic Michael Bracewell said Brown is "less concerned with the art-historical status of those works he appropriates than with their ability to serve his purpose – namely his epic exploration of paint and painting."[15] In most cases, the artist uses reproductions printed in exhibition catalogues, found on the internet, or ordered through print-on-demand companies.[16]

Файл:'Sex' (2003) Glenn Brown.jpg
'Sex' (2003) Oil on panel, 126 x 85 cm

Brown's paintings, which are uniformly smooth in surface, typically offer a trompe-l'œil illusion of turbulent, painterly application. Many viewers of his work have expressed the sensation of wanting to "lick" and "touch" the paintings.[17] Brown uses thin brushes with which he produces elongated curls and twists. The resulting flatness of the painting alludes to its origin as the chosen photograph or digital image. Per the artist Michael Stubbs: "Brown‘s computer-based preparation method prior to painting is [not] the sole reason for his relation with the digital. The computer increases and develops his choices of found imagery, but it is only a means, not the end. […]. On the contrary, his works are markers for the future of painting because they are both surface effect and material methodology, not despite the screen, but because of it.[18]"

A lot of his titles refer to titles of albums,[19] film titles,[20] science fiction literature,[21] or a specific dedication to a person.[22] The titles are not obviously connected to the paintings themselves and are not meant to be descriptive of the artwork. Brown: "That‘s it – the titles are often trying to be embarrassingly direct, and vulgar in their directness. I don‘t think that the painting is less direct, but I don‘t want the paintings to be illustrative."[23]

Paintings

Файл:'On the Way to the Leisure Centre' (2017) Glenn Brown.jpg
'On the Way to the Leisure Centre' (2017) Oil on panel, 122 x 244 cm

The subject matters of Glenn Brown's paintings range from science-fiction landscapes to abstract compositions and figurative images based on art historical references. Most paintings share a morbid, almost creepy atmosphere, which is especially underlined by the incorporation of certain unsightly physical features of his figures such as yellowish decaying teeth,[24] translucently white blind-looking eyeballs,[25] unnatural skin colours[26] and suggestions of foulness and smell emanating from figures' bodies.[27] Brown: "I like my paintings to have one foot in the grave, as it were, and to be not quite of this world. I would like them to exist in a dream world, which I think of as being the place that they occupy, a world that is made up of the accumulation of images that we have stored in our subconscious, and that coagulate and mutate when we sleep."[28]

Many of Brown's portraits depict amorphous beings that have been described as "tumurous lumps that look like outsized, inflamed organs".[29] Often they are ironically attributed with recurring features such as flowers growing out of their compost-like bodies,[30] hallows placed over heads[31] or red noses.[32] In few of these amorphous and abstract forms, female figures are embedded[33] within the mottling masses of unidentifiable matter.[34]

Sculptures

Brown also places sculpture as a central point of his practice. They are created by accumulating thick layers of oil paint over structures or "often a found bronze sculpture, such as an equestrian figure or the human figure. Brown uses one large brush throughout the making of the sculpture. He paints shadows on the works to give them a light and dark side."[35]

Файл:'American Sublime' (2017) Glenn Brown.jpg
'American Sublime' (2017) Oil and acrylic paint on bronze, 98.5 x 62 x 60 cm

His sculptures, deliberately emphasising the three-dimensional quality of oil brushstrokes, stand in stark contrast to his flat paintings.[36] Brown: "Originally I presented the sculptures on the gallery floor to look as abject as possible, as if they had materialised from a painting and fallen to the ground. Also, I wanted to avoid the artificial context involved in putting them on a pedestal. To view them, you had to bend or crouch down, lowering yourself to their somewhat debased position. But they were just getting destroyed, so they had to be separated from the public by putting them in vitrines. As a result, I was able to make them more delicate, and at the same time I started to use more complex supporting structures inside them. It is these supports that allow the sculptures to tilt and lean as much as they do."[37]

Etchings

Файл:'Half-Life (after Rembrandt) 1' (2016) Glenn Brown.jpg
'Half-Life (after Rembrandt) 1' (2016) Etching on paper, 76 x 56 cm

In 2008 Brown created a series of prints entitled "Layered Etchings (Portraits)" which were inspired by the artists Urs Graf, Rembrandt and Lucian Freud. Brown scanned a vast number of reproductions from books and digitally manipulated them by stretching them to standard sizes. He then layered selected scans over each other, resulting in single images. The many contour and incarnation lines of the original works (the artist used up to fifteen different image sources for one layered portrait), as well as the textured spots of lithographic printing, obscure the sitters' individual identities. The resulting half-length portraits are "de-individualised"[38] by the deliberate accumulation of too many portraits over each other.

The etchings were collated in Glenn Brown: Etchings (Portraits), published by Ridinghouse in 2009 which featured a specially commissioned text by John-Paul Stonard that discusses elements of the old and the new in the portraits as they embody concepts of destruction and the violence of appropriation.[39]

Drawings

In the last few years, Brown has extensively embraced drawing. Still conceptually rooted to art historical references, he stretches, combines, distorts and layers images to create subtle yet complex line-based works.[40] Brown: “I fell completely in love with drawing again about four years ago. I love the delicate intimate movement of the hand as it draws a line. With Goltzius, for instance, you get this thrill of delicacy. Drawing has a freshness and passion painting often doesn’t.”[41]

Файл:'The Music of the Mountains' (2016) Glenn Brown.jpg
'The Music of the Mountains' (2016) Indian ink and acrylic on panel, 135 x 95 x 3 cm

"In drawings produced since 2013, artists of the Renaissance (such as Andrea del Sarto), Mannerism (Bartholomäus Spranger), the Baroque (Peter Paul Rubens), the Rococo (Giovanni Battista Tiepolo), Neoclassicism (Pompeo Girolamo Batoni) and French Romanticism (Eugène Delacroix) have served as starting points for Brown’s eminently variable linear transformations."[42]

Controversy

In 2000 Brown was accused of plagiarism by The Times. Glenn Brown referenced a work by Tony Roberts for a science fiction novel cover. The photographer Wolfgang Tillmans won the Turner prize that year, and a legal case brought by Roberts against Brown was settled out of court.[43]

Public collections

Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago

Arts Council Collection, London

British Museum, London

Delfina Foundation, London

Fondazione Sandretto Re Rebaudengo, Turin

FRAC - Limousin, Limoges

Francois Pinault Foundation, Venice

Musée National d'Art Moderne, Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris

Rennie Collection, Vancouver

Tate, London

The Laing Art Gallery, Newcastle

The Museum of Modern Art, New York

The New Art Gallery, Walsall

Walker Art Center, Minneapolis

V-A-C Collection, Moscow

Zabludowicz Collection, London

The Brown Collection

Opened to the public in October 2022, The Brown Collection displays Brown's personal collection, combining his work and work by other artists. The renovated 1905 mews warehouse has four floors of exhibition space, an archive and offices. The museum is open Wednesday to Saturday, between 10.30 am and 6 pm with no admission fee.[44]

Файл:The Brown Collection Front of Building.jpg
The Brown Collection, Marylebone, London

The museum answers Brown’s long-held desire for a permanent place in London to show his collection.[45] Viewing The Brown Collection like a work of art, he says, ‘I’m concerned about it being something that I can play with, use as a mode of expression for myself. It’s a place to experiment'.[46] The collection includes both Brown’s own work and his extensive collection of works by other artists, predominantly of Old Masters, but also of 20th and 21st century artists. Among them are Gillian Wearing, Abraham Bloemaert, Henri Fantin-Latour, Grace Pailthorpe, Hans Hartung, Austin Osman Spare and Gaetano Gandolfi.

References

Шаблон:Reflist

External links

Шаблон:Young British Artists Шаблон:Authority control

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  10. Шаблон:London Gazette
  11. Шаблон:Cite news
  12. Шаблон:Cite web
  13. Glenn Brown: "People may think that a single painting stimulates me to make a 'copy', but I never make a direct quotation. I start with a vague idea of the kind of painting I want to make, and I do small sketches of it. These will more or less determine the size of the painting, the colour, the type of background, etc, but at that point I still don’t know what the subject matter will be, or which artist will inspire the work. Then I spend some time looking through books and catalogues to find a painting that fits my idea as closely as possible. I look at hundreds of images to find a reproduction I can transform by stretching, pulling or turning it upside down so it fits into my practice.” Quoted in Шаблон:Cite book
  14. Richard Alleyne, How inspiration can be mistaken for imitation The Telegraph, 29 Nov 2000 (accessed 7 January 2014).
  15. Шаблон:Cite book
  16. Шаблон:Cite book
  17. Шаблон:Cite news
  18. Шаблон:Cite book
  19. See Pablo Lafuente’s summary of album titles resembled in Glenn Brown’s paintings: "Architecture and Morality (after a 1981 album by Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark), Death Disco (a 1979 record by Public Image Ltd.), Alas Dies Laughing (a Cocteau Twins song from 1982), The Osmond Family (after the 1970s American band), and The Three Wise Virgins (after Gladys Brooks’ 1957 novel, or maybe after Carlos Schwabe’s 1970s painting, or possibly a 16th-century fresco in Parma). Шаблон:Cite journal
  20. Such as "The Rebel", "Saturday Night Fever" or "The Sound of Music". Шаблон:Cite book
  21. For example the paintings "after Chris Foss", the illustrator of science fiction novels.
  22. Such as the series of paintings dedicated "for Ian Curtis", the lead singer of the band Joy Division, or his painting "Joseph Beuys" from 2001.
  23. Шаблон:Cite journal
  24. Evident for example in “The Great Masturbator” from 2006.
  25. Evident in “Sex” from 2003 or “Wild Horses” from 2007.
  26. Evident in “Dark Star” from 2003, “Joseph Beuys” from 2001, “Led Zeppelin” from 2005 and many more.
  27. See for instance “Spearmint Rhino” from 2009, “Greetings from the Future” from 2005, “Kill Yourself” from 2002.
  28. Glenn Brown quoted in Шаблон:Cite book
  29. Шаблон:Cite book
  30. See "The Hinterland" from 2006, "Polichinelle" from 2007, "The Revolutionary Corps of Teenage Jesus" from 2005.
  31. See especially Brown’s portraits that reference the works by Frank Auerbach, for example Brown’s "The Riches of the Poor" from 2003 or "Shallow Deaths" from 2000.
  32. See "Sex" from 2003, "Declining Nude" from 2006 or "The Holy Virgin" from 2003.
  33. Such as the female figure in "God Speed to a Great Astronaut" from 2007 or "Asylums of Mars" from 2006.
  34. Шаблон:Cite book
  35. Шаблон:Cite book
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  43. Шаблон:Cite web
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  45. Шаблон:Cite web
  46. Шаблон:Cite web