Eva Hesse
40 x 30.5 x 0.4cm
15 3/4 x 12 x 1/8 inches
Frame:
44 x 34 x 3.6 cm
17 3/8 x 13 3/8 x 1 3/8 inches
Weitere Abbildungen
‘The hell with them all,’ she wrote in her journal a few weeks before her graduation. ‘Paint yourself out, through and through, it will come by you alone. You must come to terms with your own work not with any other being.’
And paint she did, making about 50 oils on canvas and Masonite in the course of a year. She was living in the West Village, in her first real apartment, squeezing in studio hours around various part-time jobs. She was in therapy too, processing the events of her extraordinarily difficult childhood from fleeing Nazi German, to her parent’s divorcee and ultimately her depression prone mothers suicide. A series of tortured apparitions emerged from her brush: big, skeletal heads pressed up against the picture plane, or smaller wraiths dancing or fighting, reminiscent of works be Wilhelm de Kooning, Alberto Giacometti or Arshile Gorky. She handled the paint with abandon, but restricted her palette to smoggy greys and yellows, enlivened by the occasional flash of orange or magenta.
‘No Title’ is a vulnerable canvas, using experimental brushstrokes and thick impasto; the painting depicts two loosely rendered figures positioned in lushly painted vacant pictorial space. These willowy sylphs portray an apparent disconnection between one body and another, and yet, the pictorial drama of the works would be incomplete without the presence of each figure. The palpable space or separation between the two figures may have been Hesse’s way of negotiating the relationships of the couple, whether it be the dyad of mother and child; the bond of siblings or of husband and wife. As Helen Molesworth noted the eeriness of the paintings has less to do with their subject matter than with Hesse’s ‘vacillating movement between flesh and paint, line and abstraction, figure and ground.’
The ‘Spectres’, over all, are incredibly private works; Hesse made them for herself and did not show them during her lifetime. She literally painted her Self out, these works are a manifestation of her own introspection of coming to terms with herself through form and material and commencing her position as an artist. Even now, looking at them can feel a bit intrusive. But by watching Hesse ‘paint herself out,’ we can see just how, and with what difficulty, she navigated her way into the art world and embraced her burgeoning maturity.
Provenance
The Estate of Eva Hesse
Hauser & Wirth
exhibitions
Robert Miller Gallery, 'Abstract-Figurative', New York NY, June 29 - August 13, 1993
Ulmer Museum, 'Eva Hesse. Drawing in Space. Bilder und Reliefs', Ulm/DE, March 27 - May 23, 1994 (travelled to: Westfälisches Landesmuseum Münster, Münster/DE, August 7 - October 16, 1994)
The Ueno Royal Museum, 'Against all Odds. The Healing Powers of Art', Tokyo/JP, June 17 - June 25, 1994
Robert Miller Gallery, 'Eva Hesse. Dream Portraits, Paintings from 1960-61', New York NY, March 12 - April 6, 1996
Setagaya Art Museum, 'De-Genderism-Détruire dit-elle/il', Tokyo/JP, February 8 - March 23, 1997
Maccarone Gallery, 'Pretty Ugly', New York NY, July 10 - September 1, 2008
Hammer Museum, 'Eva Hesse Spectres 1960', Los Angeles CA, September 25, 2010 - January 3, 2011 (travelled to: University of New Mexico Art Museum, Albuquerque NM, January 28 - May 22, 2011; Elizabeth A. Sackler Center for Feminist Art, Brooklyn Museum, New York NY, September 16, 2011 - January 8, 2012)
Kukje Gallery, 'Eva Hesse. Spectres and Studiowork', Seoul/KR, February 28 - April 7, 2012
Museum Brandhorst, 'Painting 2.0. Expression in the Information Age', Munich/DE, November 14, 2015 - April 30, 2016 (travelled to: mumok, Museum Moderner Kunst Stiftung Ludwig Wien, Vienna/AT, June 4 - November 6, 2016)
Hauser & Wirth, 'Bodily Abstractions / Fragmented Anatomies', Monaco/MC, January 26 - March 26, 2022
Hauser & Wirth Bahnhofstrasse, 'EVA HESSE. Forms & Figures', Zurich/CH, September 16 - November 19, 2022
Literature
Brigitte Reinhardt, Friedrike Kitschen (ed.), 'Eva Hesse. Drawing in Space. Bilder und Reliefs', Ulm/DE: Ulmer Museum, Ostfildern/DE: Cantz, 1994, pp. 20, 173, listed, p. 129, ill. in colour (exh. cat.)
Akira Tatehata, Sam Hunter, 'Against all Odds. The Healing Powers of Art', Tokyo/JP: The Ueno Royal Museum, 1994, pl. 15, p. 39 (exh. cat.)
Annette Spohn, 'I will paint against every rule I or others have invisibly placed', Berlin/DE: Freie Universität (dissertation), 1997, pp. 158-159, ill.
Yoko Hasegawa (ed.), 'De-Genderism', Tokyo/JP: Setagaya Art Museum, 1997, p. 41, pl. 12 (exh. cat.)
Renate Petzinger, Volker Rattemeyer (ed.), 'Eva Hesse', Wiesbaden/DE: Museum Wiesbaden, 2002, p. 36, listed, p. 41, ill. in colour (not exhibited; exh. cat.)
Barry Rosen (ed.), Renate Petzinger (ed.), 'Eva Hesse. Catalogue Raisonné. Volume I: Paintings', Wiesbaden/DE: Museum Wiesbaden; New Haven CT: Yale University Press, 2006, P 61, pp. 144-145, ill. in colour (cat. rais.)
Luanne McKinnon (ed.), 'Eva Hesse Spectres 1960', New Haven CT, London/UK: Yale University Press, 2010, p. 2, ill. in colour, pl. XV, p. 53, ill. in colour, p. 55, discussed in text (exh. cat.)
Kukje Gallery, Tina Kim (ed.), 'Eva Hesse. Spectres and Studiowork', Seoul/KR: Kukje Gallery, 2012, p. 19, discussed in text, p. 85, ill. in colour (exh. cat.)
Manuela Ammer (ed.), Achim Hochdörfer (ed.), David Joselit (ed.), 'Painting 2.0. Expression in the Information Age. Gesture and Spectacle. Eccentric Figuration. Social Networks', Munich/DE: Prestel, 2015, p. 104, ill. in colour, p. 274, listed (exh. cat.)