Fredericks & Freiser is pleased to announce an exhibition
of drawings by Peter Blake and John Wesley.
For both Blake and Wesley, the process of tracing functions
as a fundamental step in their artistic methodology
– a translation device that allows the artist to transcribe
daily imagery into their own aesthetic language. As
predecessors to the Pop movement, Wesley and Blake looked
at advertisement, tattoos, cartoons and typographical
design to create something fantastical out of the mundane
and record the social preoccupations of the time. It
is this initial process that allows Blake and Wesley
to be selective in their appropriations and dictates
the eventual qualities of the final work. Blake's tracings
are complicated and crowded – his use of the thinner
line allows him to build up intricate details that find
their way into the competed paintings. Wesley strips
down elements of popular culture to fine contours and
evocative abstractions – leaving raw outlines over bare
landscapes. However, the continued link between these
two artists is a shared interest in both pop phenomena
and nostalgic folk art.
About the Artists
Peter Blake is often described, along with Richard
Hamilton and Patrick Caulfield, as one of the godfathers
of British Pop art. At the core of his work is an ever-present
fascination with the world of popular culture and entertainment,
including music, film, and sports. Perhaps best known
for the 1967 album cover of Sgt. Pepper's Lonely
Hearts Club Band, Blake feeds off this frenzied
atmosphere, pulling from it numerous defining marks
and details. Blake has had numerous solo shows, including
retrospectives at Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam and the
Tate Gallery, London.
For over forty years, John Wesley has created an unrelenting and
remarkably singular body of work whose subject is no less than the
American psyche. While many artists of his generation have used the popular
image to explore the cultural landscape, Wesley has employed a comic-strip
style and a compositional rigor to make deeply personal, often
hermetic paintings that strike at the core of our most primal fears,
joys, and desires. John Wesley has shown widely in the United States
and Europe; he has been the subject of over 60 solo exhibitions. His
most recent retrospective was at Museum Haus Lange, Krefeld.
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