Consider that which exists & which not & recognize things just as they are
Dutch Artist Piet van den Boog Solos at Mike Weiss Gallery
20.05.2010 19:22
NEW YORK, NY.- Mike Weiss Gallery presents new large-scale works by Dutch artist Piet van den Boog. Influenced by Dutch painters Frans Hals and Vermeer, van den Boog evokes an array of emotion in the spectator by allowing him/her to be present in a profoundly intimate setting. In this new series of paintings, the artist illustrates the dichotomy that the human ability to make choices both affords us and denies us control over our lives. Heavily influenced by the writings of Sylvia Plath, the artist based these works on a passage from Plath’s 1963 novel in which a fig tree metaphorically describes the situation that we often find ourselves in when faced with difficult choices:
Van den Boog’s method of using etching fluids to oxidize the surface of the unfinished black steel creates a deep and weighty aesthetic. Van den Boog reveals his thematic intention through controlling the corrosion of the steel, therefore manifesting the metaphor of the figs’ demise through his materials. He lays an under-painting in acrylic for quick-drying and a sketchy finish, and then applies a top layer of oil paint.
This technique creates nuances and details in the portraits and intensifies the color. In addition, referencing the French tale of the sculptor Rodin and his mistress Camille Claudel, van den Boog uses clay on the surface as a medium and a metaphor. With their complex medium of two-toned steel, two types of paint, and a top layer of clay, these paintings take on an innovative textural and dynamic quality.
This is Piet van den Boog's second solo show at Mike Weiss Gallery. He is represented in many prominent collections in the United States and abroad, including the Scheringa Museum voor Realisme, Spanbroek, the Eileen S. Kaminsky Family Foundation, New York, and the ING Bank, Amsterdam among others. Visit Mike Weiss Gallery in New York at : http://www.mikeweissgallery.com/html/home.asp Exhibition on view through 19 June, 2010.