3 minute read

Are we exhausted from radical abstraction?

towards a more realistic expression. The early Greek philosophical tradition known as Stoicism had its focus on humans rather than Gods, and this declined dependence on deity meant a stronger basis on reality and our surroundings. This, therefore, becomes reflected in the arts with a more realistic and observant figurative language.

In this sense, the return to figurative art is a cyclic move. After reaching the highest point of abstraction, the artistic will is confronted by the opposite will that drives us into the passage to figuration.

Advertisement

If one has been closely following the global art market in the past few years, it would be impossible to look over an interesting trend - figurative art is coming back. At the October 2022 London Frieze Masters, I am seeing artists like Philip Guston, Giacometti, and George Condo presented at the auction. These artists all work with human figures, forms we can recognize as resembling reality. This is a turnaround from a decade ago where the record-breaking sales were Rothko and Pollock. If the dialectical materialism theory is true, we must be in the midst of a period of transition. More specifically, the popular mode of figuration in the art market seems to be a more surrealist style. At the 2022 Sotheby’s New York sale, rising artist Christina Quarles’ painting Night Fell Upon Us Up On Us (2019) was sold at a surprising $4.5 million, despite its “laughable” estimate of $600,000 to $800,000. In her works, we see elongated, distorted human figures with colorful flesh and a range of textures. While the painting is all about the physical body, it appears to follow a stream of unconsciousness and spontaneous decisions, leading up to a surreal outcome of postures pressing against and lying over each other. These biomorphic forms only slightly resemble reality yet they are predominantly dictated by the artist’s intuitive mode of expression, giving in to the surrealist impetus. This trend seems to be proven by the recent wave of exhibitions as well. At the end of 2021, Tate Modern and The Metropolitan Museum of Art organized the exhibition Surrealism Beyond Borders in New York. The show explored the locally distinct yet simultaneous waves of surrealism movements across the globe. Last month, Pace Gallery’s new space at 125 Newbury also showcased an overwhelmingly surrealist figuration style. All of the works in the show were fleshy and anthropomorphic, using the physicality of the body to explore philosophical concerns such as decay, death, and ephemerality. Following this, we see Jennifer Packer’s solo exhibition open in October 2022 at the Whitney Museum of American Art in collaboration with London’s Serpentine Gallery. Alice Neel’s exhibition opened at the Pompidou center in Paris. Even in Philadelphia, there is the new exhibition Matisse in the 1930s, which we could call a hint of the resurging popularity of figures. Back in the 20th century, the return to figuration occurred over the course of a few decades in different places, but globalization and increased communication now seem to have synchronized this new pattern across the globe. As this trend has become noticeable, many are suggesting possible reasons for the transition. Are we exhausted from radical abstraction? One plausible take is that after two years of isolation, people want to see people. Since art and psychological state are inherently interconnected, some argue that we turn to art in order to feel more connected at difficult times like COVID. A figurative art that makes clearer reference to the real world may feel more grounding to many. The transition may be taking a surrealist passage because altered representations of reality — for example, differently colored bodies, subversive use of texture and materiality — make it easier for us to digest figurations. That is, surrealism renders reality in a way that recalls another world or dimension, thereby offering a smoother stylistic transition to figuration.

To add my own thoughts on this debate, I argue that the new buyers with the purchasing power are those people who grew up with Pop art. To trace back the first popularization of pop art is in fact very interesting. American pop art saw its heyday in the 1960s; its buyers grew up reading comics in the 1930s and 40s, not to mention the launch of Marvel in 1939. The comic figuration style in pop art would have been familiar to the eyes of the people who grew up surrounded by comics and now had the wealth to purchase art. Now that we are in the 2020s, the pop art tradition has continued to be influential in the art market, and to the general public as an easier type of art to digest. Having new generations of wealthy buyers introduced to the art market, figurative art may present a less difficult way of entering the art world for these people. Looking back on the 20th century, we often mention Anselm Kiefer and George Baselitz as the pioneers of German neo expressionism. Philip Guston and Julian Schnabel are considered the American artists who led the American return to figuration in the 1970s and 80s. Which artists are at the forefront of our time? Or are they yet to come?

This article is from: