Bernard Frize
Bernard Frize
Bernard Frize
Pox, 2010 , Acrylic and resin on canvas, 241 x 210 cm, 94 7/8 x 82 5/8 in.
Raim, 2010 , Acrylic and resin on canvas, 241 x 210 cm, 94 7/8 x 82 5/8 in.
Tara, 2010 , Acrylic and resin on canvas, 241 x 210 cm, 94 7/8 x 82 5/8 in.
Malbux, 2010 , Acrylic and resin on canvas, 186 x 186 cm, 73 1/4 x 73 1/4 in.
Simon Lee Gallery is proud to present Red, Yellow and Blue, its second show
of new paintings by highly regarded French artist Bernard Frize.
The title of the show, Red, Yellow and Blue is a reference to Barnett
Newman’s series of four paintings entitled Who’s afraid of Red, Yellow and
Blue (circa1966). In this series Newman uses the three colours in their most
basic, primary hues, and arranges colour-fields intended to immerse the
viewer. Newman’s series consisted of large expanses of vibrant red would be
punctuated by vertical “zips” of blue and yellow.
Barnett Newman is well known for his decision to strip away much of the
Modernist constructs of painting, and follow in a similar vein to fellow abstract
expressionists, focusing on redefining the medium and its parameters.
Bernard Frize has been influenced by Newman’s approach throughout his
career. Since the 1970s, Frize has escaped traditional modes of painting,
disregarding figurative and compositional subject matter, to focus on the
reduction of painting to the physical act itself. Frize focuses on the mechanics
of painting, and paints in series, following strict rules, and using specific colour
palettes.
Frize’s works can be seen as documentation of choreographed acts of
painting, often involving many people at once. In previous series Frize has set
rules and used elaborate technical processes. The outcome of the work is
determined by the process in which it is made, and much is left to chance.
Bernard Frize was born in 1949 in Saint Mandé, France. He lives and works
between Paris and Berlin. He has work in numerous public collections,
including: The Tate Gallery, London; MUMOK, Vienna; Museo Nacional
Centro de Reina Sofia, Madrid; Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles;
and the Kunstmuseums, Basel and Zurich.
frize's work has, for many years now, consistently yet without turning
into stale repetition, explored to great effect a highly specific visual
vocabulary. his works seem to be predicated upon the same visual
conceit: the interweaving of highly viscous brushstrokes within whose
final pattern the viewer becomes lost in their attempt to locate the origin
of gestures, the sophistication of which being at odds with their apparent
immediacy.
An exhibition of his painting will be on show at the Lemonstreet Gallery, Dublin in September.
Bernard Frize
Frith Street Gallery, London
Frieze, Issue 26, Jan-Feb 1996
Frize's idea of the one-stroke painting, coupled with the setting out
of the painting's method before lifting the brush, strongly suggests
a conceptual framework for the series. And yet, one thing that we
can be certain of is that these are definitely not Conceptual
paintings. Frize allows the materials sufficient reign that not only
do they run away from him, but all the associations do too - give
them an inch and they'll take a mile. But why do these paintings
prove so difficult to forget? Is it because the sweetly naughty
associations wriggle free, exactly mirroring the material's
insistence on dribbling off and blending in whatever manner takes
its fancy?
text
copyright
david
barrett
| 12 June 2003
Known for his impressive stylistic and technical diversity, visitors have the rare
opportunity to see a combination of Frize's sculpture, photography and recent
painting.
With paint as the main ingredient, Frize suggests that his method is one of
making recipes, a question of process and discovery, controlling chance,
arranging colour with simple brush strokes.
Taking the act of creation down to a basic level, the paint is often dragged or
drawn across the canvas to reveal a range of effects. This method is usually
collaborative, involving a number of people, while the crucial decisions are
made by Frize himself.
Apparently simple canvases, the clarity of the works draws the viewer into the
process of their creation, opening the artist's technique up to his audience.
The sculpture on show in the exhibition takes on a similar ethic of colourful
simplicity. Two three-dimensional figure-eights sit, like a knot at the centre of
the space, their design arranged so that portions of eight colours on one lie
adjacent to the same colours on the other.
Most interestingly, it is through his photographic works that Frize offers the
greatest clue to the sources of inspiration for his work as a whole.
Suite au Rouleau
16 February- 27 March 1994
The rigorous procedure followed by Frize in these paintings was foiled by the
spontaneity in his use of the roller and in the wetness and translucency of the
paint, resulting in layers bleeding into one another. The painted surface traces
the artist’s movement around it, embodying the smallest variation in pressure
and speed with which the paint is applied. It records the means to its own end,
particularly in the order in which the layers are put down.
The paintings depict themselves with an emphasis on the way they were
made. However, rather than leading the viewer into a self-referential dead-
end, they open up the established practice of paintings to new alternatives.
Frize brings an extraordinary inventiveness to painting through conventional
materials and tools.
Bernard Frize was born 1954, Saint Mande, France. Frize's artworks have
been exhibited extensively across Europe and the U.K., as well as recently in
the United States. He is represented by the Galerie Emmanuel Perrotin in
Paris and Miami, Simon Lee in London, and Patrick Painter Inc. in Los
Angeles. Frize lives and works in Paris, and Berlin.
What is the greatest number of color fields that can be arranged so that each
maintains a border with all others? Bernard Frize's Heawood, 1999, a pair of
painted sculptures in tire permanent collection of the MAMVP, and Heawood,
2003, the thirteen digital prints that introduce this show of the artist's mostly
recent paintings, address this thorny question. The works' namesake, British
mathematician Percy John Heawood, labored over this and related problems
(which originated in cartography) in the years surrounding the turn of the last
century; at one point, exploring three dimensional forms, he determined that
no more than eight fields of color can abut one another on the surface of a
double torus (a volume shaped, in accidental analogy, exactly like a three-
dimensional figure eight). The twin Heawood sculptures are based on this
formula.
Among Frize's few forays into three dimensions (which include Peintures sur
un fil [Paintings on a Thread], 1978-80, long strands of nylon coated with
countless layers of paint then sandpapered to produce multicolored bars
approximately six and a half feet long and an inch and a half in diameter),
these double doughnuts are on examinations frustrating, to say the least:
Because they're placed on the floor, one side out of sight, it's impossible to
verify if all eight color fields really are contiguous. The later, two-dimensional
Heawoods, which are based on computer generated images …
It is a contemporary cliche: the painter who frenetically switches modes, so as
to undermine the ideal of stylistic identity. Bernard Frize's paintings, at first
glance, give the impression of this kind of extreme heterogeneity, but while his
work may follow no regular, easily parsed progression, neither is it animated
by a kind of Brownian movement that deprives it of all structure. Rather, this
work reveals an order that is both branching and discontinuous, like a network
of echoes and resurgences.
The principal difficulty of Frize's oeuvre derives from the fact that the kinship
among individual paintings or groups of works is not one of appearance but of
method. To take a simple example, consider the works in the "Lacquers"
series (begun in 1990) in relation to the paintings from the 1980 "Suite
Segond." To make one of the "Lacquers," Frize blends paints of various colors
in a box, lets the surface dry, then sticks this hardened skin to a canvas.
Wrapped around the deep stretcher bars, the sheet of congealed paint fits the
canvas in one piece. In the second series, Frize opens cans of paint, waits for
the surfaces to dry, and applies the hardened disks that form there to canvas
in random accumulations. In spite of their procedural similarities, the two
series could not appear more different.
In Type, 1998, tributaries of bright color from the left side of the canvas lead to
a central axis, where they converge in a diagonal river …