Vito Schnabel Gallery is pleased to announce the exhibition Markus the Painter or the Ratio of the Impossible, opening April 21 at the historic Old Santa Monica Post Office. Comprising almost thirty paintings made between 1964 and 2021, this exhibition presents a survey of Markus Lüpertz’s work and sheds light on the prolific, influential, and critically acclaimed German artist's six-decade immersion in the medium of painting, revealing his unique approach to the realm that lies between representation and abstraction.
Markus the Painter or the Ratio of the Impossible is the 81 year old master's first solo exhibition in Los Angeles. It will remain on view through June 11th. In his practice, Markus Lüpertz achieves a form of abstraction that disrupts pictorial convention and redeploys it as a tool to motivate the creative process. He isolates, liberates, and transforms familiar figural elements or motifs from their bearings, applying expressive gestures to deconstruct the context in order to create something entirely new. Characterized by pictorial plasticity, his oeuvre is deliberately, intoxicatingly void of stylistic consistency. As Lüpertz explains, “What I paint is a chain of things; one painting leads to the next”. Instead, his paintings focus on the energy of the act of making itself, and upon the internal process of the artist.
Lüpertz’s practice arises from a conversation with the past to engage with the ever-present, eternal challenge of what it means to paint a picture, to achieve the "ratio of the impossible". In his own words, “In painting there is nothing new, only new artists who try to explain an ancient mystery: painting, in its time.”
Among Lüpertz’s first mature works of the mid 1960s, his “dithyrambic” paintings explore the process of representation. Referencing an ancient Greek term, this series derives from the legend of the cult of Dionysus and borrows from the concepts of Friedrich Nietzsche’s Dionysian poetry. The term refers to a form of wildly lyrical hymns performed in a dithyrambic dance, dedicated to Dionysus, the god of wine, vegetation, unbridled pleasure, festivity, and frenzy. For Lüpertz, the dithyrambic concept served as a correlative to his own impassioned celebration of the process of painting. This construct became fundamental to his aesthetic philosophy and fueled the evolution of his ideas about pictorial representation and abstract invention.
On view in the exhibition at the Old Santa Monica Post Office, Zelt - dithyrambisch (Tent - dithyrambic) (1965), Fußball (Football) (1966), and Eisenbahnscheine-Motte (Railroad Truck - Moth) (1969) evoke dynamic, dramatic volumetric structures or objects that convey abstract and pictorial qualities. Hovering projections in flat planar space, Lüpertz’s rapid and rhythmic brushwork pushes the materiality of paint into form, emphasizing compositional gesture over the thematic resonance of visual representation. These early paintings moved the artist toward his distinct style: the rendering of familiar motifs with great expressiveness while maintaining an elusive, mysterious obscurity. Lüpertz’s work thus located and confronted the profound dichotomy of “something abstract that is also figurative.”
Lüpertz developed a serial approach early in his career, reflecting his fascination with a cinematic style that favored the abstract portrayal of characters over traditional storytelling techniques. In keeping with his renegade mindset and irreverent disregard for convention, he adopted this pictorial strategy: Lüpertz began to conceptualize ideas through the repetition of a motif or theme through serial variation.
Following the radical dithyrambic paintings and a provocative series of "German motifs" made during the 1960s and ‘70s, Lüpertz increasingly explored the ground between abstraction and figuration in works ever more nuanced and patterned, dense and evocative. He began to intertwine motifs he had previously isolated in single compositions. In Mal ab Alter (Copy it, Dude) (1982) and Genie (Genius) (1982), his approach to color, line, tension, and gesture renders a visual spectacle amplified by collage. Adding torn posters from cigarette advertising, Lüpertz painted over letters and isolated elements of text, adding a surreal element to the already obscure nature of his thickly woven compositions.
The exhibition also presents five canvases from the artist's Rückenakte (“nude backs”) series of the early 2000s. Inspired by a distant memory of an encounter with his wife, Lüpertz reproduced his chosen image using a cinematic approach across more than a hundred paintings. In this extensive study of the human form, the nude back is explored as a figurative form collapsing into abstraction. Lüpertz's creative manipulation of mass and volume, line, texture, and color gives way to his conviction that “art is a way of experiencing the artfulness of an object." His Rükenakte works explore the way that a timeless motif—the rückenfigur (figure from the back) has been an artistic trope since classical antiquity—transcends contemporary culture and acquires new significance.
Lüpertz’s most recent works on view, Europa (Weiße Schnecke) (White Snail) (2021) and Europa and Zeus (2021), revisit antiquity through the theme of Arcadia, the pastoral utopia that has occupied the collective consciousness of Western art history since ancient Greece. In these paintings, the artist mines the myth of Europa, the beautiful Phoenecian princess abducted by Zeus, who took the form of a bull and whisked her away to Crete. These works evoke enigmatic still-life paintings, combining familiar motifs within the artist’s oeuvre—an animal skull, a snail shell—with art historical referents. Remixing and reinventing canonical and contemporary visual motifs, Lüpertz achieves a push-and-pull energy. Striving toward a new objectivity and a greater sublime engagement with the poles of figuration and abstraction, he merges remnants of the past to create weight in the present day.
About the artist
Markus Lüpertz, born in 1941 in Liberec, Bohemia, is one of the most important and influential artists to emerge from post-war Germany. His work has been presented in numerous international exhibitions, including solo showings at the Hirshhorn Museum and Phillips Collection, Washington, DC; the Musée d’Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris; Kunst- und Austellungshalle der Bundesrepublik Deutschland, Bonn; Haus der Kunst, Munich; Gemeentemuseum, The Hague; The Hermitage State Museum, St. Petersburg; the Moscow Museum of Modern Art; and Palazzo Loredan, Venice. Lüpertz’s works are held in the collections of The Museum of Modern Art, New York; The National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C; The Albertina Museum, Vienna; Pinault Collection, Centre Pompidou, Paris; Pinakothek, Munich; and the Von der Heydt Museum in Wuppertal, Germany, among others.
About the Old Santa Monica Post Office
A striking example of the Streamline Moderne architectural style that emerged in the 1930s, the Old Santa Monica Post Office was designed by Louis Simon and completed in 1938. The building was a commission of the Public Works Administration (PWA), a national recovery program established during the Great Depression. The building is distinguished by its sprawling interior and soaring ceiling with raw industrial beams, and its end-grain wood floors. Its white stucco facade and paneled lobby were granted Santa Monica Landmark status via preservation covenant by the Santa Monica City Council in 2014. This noted historic building was acquired by Alexander Dellal of UK-based Allied Commercial Exporters Ltd (A.C.E.) in 2017. A.C.E.'s Los Angeles office is focused on the rehabilitation and adaptive reuse of historic and landmarked buildings in the greater Los Angeles area. In addition to the Old Santa Monica Post Office, A.C.E. has acquired and is currently developing the old Venice Post Office.
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