Fredericks & Freiser is pleased to announce
an exhibition of new work by Douglas Kolk. This will
be the artist's first solo exhibition in New York since
1997. The show will include eight large-scale works
on paper. Kolk makes dense compositions that are dark
and poignant. Whereas his early drawings depict the
fragility of his young and mournfully afflicted characters
with a spare and startlingly abrupt line, his recent
painting/drawing/collage works display a horror vacui
of unrestricted gesture. Here KolkÍs particularly nightmarish
vision is rendered uncooked.
Evoking the fragmented narratives of American artists...Douglas Kolk's collaged
drawings explore an over-identification with television culture. His poster-sized
work broadcasts a chaotic media: displaced figures, consumer logos and fairytale
ghoulies abound in his channel-surfing style. Through his fragmented compositions,
Kolk captures an adolescent zeitgeist. His images present fragile and fluctuating
notions of identity and corrupted innocence... His forms range from the poetically
detailed to the violently doodled, his sentiments overlapping in precarious balance.
Combining media clippings with delicate sketches and bold painterly abstraction,
Kolk contrives an alluring arena between reality and distortion. His work entrances
with confessional intimacy, disclosing compulsive beauty in the hollow and salacious.
–USA Today, Royal Academy of Arts, London, Catalogue
About the Artist
Douglas Kolk (born 1963, Newark, NJ) grew up near a
nursing home headed by his father, a Baptist preacher.
In the mid-90's he had solo exhibitions at David Zwirner,
New York; and Stephen Friedman Gallery, London. He ceased
his artistic work in 1999 as a result of excessive drug
consumption and started working again only in 2004.
Since then he has been included in group shows at Kunsthalle
Manheim; galerie du jour agnès b., Paris; and
The Royal Academy of Arts, London. He has had solo shows
with Arndt & Partner, Berlin and Zurich (who began showing
his work in 1994) and the Kunstlerverein Malkasten,
Dusseldorf. He is included in the permanent collection
of the Museum of Modern Art, New York and is the subject
of a self-titled monograph published by Hatje Cantz.
This is his first solo exhibition at Fredericks & Freiser.
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