The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA) will present New Work: Katharina Wulff, the first solo exhibition in a U.S. museum of the Morocco-based artist, and the first presentation of her work on the West Coast. Featuring nearly 20 works, the exhibition brings together a selection of Wulff’s paintings made over the last five years, along with several new works, that illustrate both the breadth and distinctive character of her work. Organized by Apsara DiQuinzio, SFMOMA assistant curator of painting and sculpture, the exhibition continues the museum’s New Work series dedicated to featuring the most innovative expressions of contemporary art.
Katharina Wulff, “Untitled,” 2011. Oil and charcoal on canvas, 12 x 9 inches, Courtesy the artist and Greene Naftali, New York.
Working dexterously from sources inspired by literature, Old Master paintings, and found photographs, Wulff makes paintings inflected by wide-ranging references and in the process builds a surreal universe that moves across time periods. In a small selection of her paintings, one can discern hints of the decorative motifs of Pierre Matisse, the unsettling figures of Pierre Klossowski, the otherworldly symbology of William Blake, the dark satire of George Grosz, and the cheerful palette of Florine Stettheimer. Despite these myriad resonances, Wulff’s pictures are decidedly of the present and together define a body of work that is uniquely her own.
At turns whimsical and macabre, naïve and sophisticated, Wulff’s paintings draw the viewer into an imaginary realm diversely marked by distant locales: grassy green knolls, rocky ocean cliffs, and urban sidewalks. Strange animals regularly populate these settings, and alluring visages depicted in close-up are frequently left half-painted or disfigured. Perspectives are often flattened, creating spaces that are compact and ambiguous. Some canvases are heavily built up with an admixture of charcoal and oil, while others possess faint graphite outlines and thin washes. An elusive sense of narrative suffuses each of the artist’s scenes—sometimes hysteric and haunting and other times serene and inviting. Wulff deftly interweaves antimonies into her body of work, combining delicacy with strength, vulnerability with terror. She similarly moves fluidly between moods and color palettes, so that each painting seems distinct and still retains a tenuous connection to her larger body of work.
Color and setting are defining attributes for many of her landscapes and portraits. For instance, a woman is distinguished by her blazing red-orange coiffure, glistening green eyes, and crimson lips, with a brilliant yellow forest that sets her in relief. In Wulff’s paintings of the last several years, the rooftop vistas, intricate mosaic tiles, and twisting medina alleys of Marrakech (her home) inspire the artist’s work. While certain characters reappear throughout the works, loosely implying narrative threads, ultimately each picture stands as an autonomous work—part of an incongruous, ever-shifting whole.
About Katharina Wulff
Born in 1968 in Berlin, Katharina Wulff lives and works in Marrakech, Morocco. She studied painting at the Hochschule der Künste in Berlin (1990–96). In 2010, she had solo exhibitions at Greene Naftali, New York, and Galerie Daniel Buchholz, Cologne. Additional solo exhibitions have occurred at Galerie Neu, Berlin; The Douglas Hyde Gallery, Dublin; Galerie Bleich-Rossi, Graz, Austria; and the Bonner Kunstverein.
About the New Work Series
From its inception in 1987, SFMOMA’s New Work series was conceived as a means to feature the most innovative expressions of contemporary art. Artists such as Matthew Barney, Marilyn Minter, and Christopher Wool were given their first solo museum exhibitions through the program, establishing the series as an important vehicle for the advancement of new art forms. Artists featured in the series over the last several decades include: Phil Collins, Rachel Harrison, Glenn Ligon, Lucy McKenzie, R. H. Quaytman, Doris Salcedo, Paul Sietsema, Luc Tuymans, Kara Walker, and Andrea Zittel among many others.
The New Work series is organized by SFMOMA and generously supported by Collectors Forum, the founding patron of the series. Major support is provided by Martha and Bruce Atwater, and Robin Wright and Ian Reeves.
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