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John Wesley

Afternoon Sail at the Edge of the World

February 27 – April 18, 2020

John Wesley
John Wesley
John Wesley
John Wesley
John Wesley
John Wesley
John Wesley
John Wesley
John Wesley
John Wesley
John Wesley
John Wesley
John Wesley
John Wesley
John Wesley
John Wesley, Wimpy's Dive, 1993

John Wesley

Wimpy's Dive, 1993

Acrylic on canvas

42 1/2h x 59w in
107.95h x 149.86w cm

 

John Wesley, Birthday, 1990

John Wesley

Birthday, 1990

Acrylic on canvas

23h x 54w in
58.42h x 137.16w cm

 

John Wesley, Untitled (Birds and Clouds), 1988

John Wesley

Untitled (Birds and Clouds), 1988

Acrylic on canvas

60h x 50w in
152.40h x 127w cm

 

John Wesley, John Dillinger's Last Ride, 1970

John Wesley

John Dillinger's Last Ride, 1970

Acrylic on canvas

30h x 50w in
76.20h x 127w cm

 

John Wesley, Quien Es?, 1976

John Wesley

Quien Es?, 1976

Acrylic on canvas

42h x 50w in
106.68h x 127w cm

 

John Wesley, Kiss My Helmet, 1965

John Wesley

Kiss My Helmet, 1965

Acrylic on canvas

27h x 44w in
68.58h x 111.76w cm

 

John Wesley, Sleeping Porch, 1981

John Wesley

Sleeping Porch, 1981

Acrylic on canvas

52h x 40w in
132.08h x 101.60w cm

 

John Wesley, Audubon's Fish Hawk, 1975

John Wesley

Audubon's Fish Hawk, 1975

Acrylic on paper

35 3/4h x 24w in
90.81h x 60.96w cm

 

John Wesley, Untitled (Three TV Screens), 1978

John Wesley

Untitled (Three TV Screens), 1978

Acrylic on canvas

24h x 69w in
60.96h x 175.26w cm

 

John Wesley, July 23, 1983, 1984

John Wesley

July 23, 1983, 1984

Acrylic on paper

29 1/2h x 42 1/4w in
74.93h x 107.32w cm

 

John Wesley, Untitled, 1979

John Wesley

Untitled, 1979

Acrylic on paper

19 3/4h x 25 1/2w in
50.17h x 64.77w cm

 

John Wesley, Untitled (Canoe), 1980

John Wesley

Untitled (Canoe), 1980

Acrylic on unstructured canvas

17 3/4h x 52w x 4 1/2d in
45.09h x 132.08w x 11.43d cm

 

John Wesley, Transport des Enfants, 1978

John Wesley

Transport des Enfants, 1978

Acrylic on paper

12 1/2h x 10 1/2w in
31.75h x 26.67w cm

 

John Wesley, Untitled

John Wesley

Untitled

Acrylic on paper

17h x 22 1/2w in
43.18h x 57.15w cm

 

John Wesley, Concord, 2004

John Wesley

Concord, 2004

Acrylic on paper

22 7/8h x 24w in
58.10h x 60.96w cm

 

John Wesley, Pink Woman in Sleeveless Sweater, 1981

John Wesley

Pink Woman in Sleeveless Sweater, 1981

Acrylic on paper

25 1/2h x 19 1/2w in
64.77h x 49.53w cm

 

John Wesley, Moon Exploring Device, 1978

John Wesley

Moon Exploring Device, 1978

Acrylic on paper

20h x 26w in
50.80h x 66.04w cm

 

John Wesley, Building Exterior, 1980

John Wesley

Building Exterior, 1980

Acrylic on paper

25 1/2h x 19 3/4w in
64.77h x 50.17w cm

 

John Wesley, Bonnets, 1990

John Wesley

Bonnets, 1990

Acrylic on paper

22h x 25w in
55.88h x 63.50w cm

 

John Wesley, Untitled, 1984

John Wesley

Untitled, 1984

Acrylic on paper

29 1/2 x 42 1/4 inches 74.9 x 107.3 cm

 

John Wesley, Transport des Enfants, 1978

John Wesley

Transport des Enfants, 1978

Acrylic on paper

19 3/4h x 25 1/2w in
50.17h x 64.77w cm

 

John Wesley, Sleeveless Sweater, 1981

John Wesley

Sleeveless Sweater, 1981

Acrylic on paper

28 3/4h x 41 1/2w in
73.03h x 105.41w cm

 

Press Release

John Wesley

An Afternoon Sail at the Edge of the World

February 29th through April 18th, 2020

 

Fredericks & Freiser is proud to announce an exhibition that examines the implication of infinite space in the work of John Wesley. An Afternoon Sail at the Edge of the World presents a selection of paintings from the 1960s to the 2000s that focuses on how the artist intertwines the notion of the infinite with themes such as mortality, eroticism, human vulnerability, and serial repetition to shape a vision that is authentic and extremely introspective.

 

John Wesley has created an ineffable 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 mysterious paintings that strike at the core of our most primal fears, joys, and desires.

 

Originally grouped with the Pop Art movement, and later on linked, due to the essentiality of his production, to Minimal Art (to such an extent that Donald Judd and Dan Flavin were counted among his greatest admirers), Wesley eludes simple classification. In fact, Wesley himself found both terms (Pop and Minimalism) to be reductive. With his meticulously expressive line, self-reflexive color palette, and photo-based meta-representations (as Judd described them), Wesley remains a unique voice in American art, whose work is best understood not as an outlier to these two canonical movements, but as a reaction. Wesley keeps a great distance from the aggressive reality of Pop and the unambiguous materiality of minimalism in favor of turning inward toward a radical intimacy.

 

An Afternoon Sail at the Edge of the World highlights the experimental and innovative nature in which Wesley transmutes the cool detachment of his infinite blues and endless flesh-tones, of vast space and boundless distance into the private, personal, and warm-hearted essence of human experience.

 

About the Artist


John Wesley has been exhibited and collected by museums worldwide since the 1960s. Surveys of his work have been held at the Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam, curated by Rudi Fuchs and Kasper Koenig (travelled to Portikus); Museum Ludwigsburg, curated by Udo Kittleman (travelled to DAAD, Berlin); PS1 MoMA, Long Island City, curated by Alana Heiss; Harvard University Art Museums, Cambridge, MA, curated by Linda Norden; Museum Haus Lange, Krefeld, Germany, curated by Martin Henschel; Chinati Foundation, Marfa, TX, curated by Marianne Stockebrand; and Fondazione Prada at the Venice Biennale curated by Germano Celant. Since 2004, the Chinati Foundation, Marfa, TX. has maintained a permanent gallery housing its collection of Wesley’s paintings, as was intended by Judd since the foundation’s inception. In 2014, Wesley was commissioned to create a public art project for the High Line. This will be the artist’s 14th solo exhibition at Fredericks & Freiser.