Wade Guyton (born 1972) is an American post-conceptual artist who among other things makes digital paintings on canvas using scanners and digital inkjet technology.
Wade Guyton | |
---|---|
Born | 1972 Hammond, Indiana, US |
Education | University of Tennessee and Hunter College |
Known for | Conceptual art, installation art, painting |
Early life and education
editGuyton was born in Hammond, Indiana, in 1972, and grew up in the small town of Lake City, Tennessee. His father, who died when Guyton was two, and his stepfather, also deceased, were both steelworkers. Guyton's mother, a homemaker, sometimes worked as a secretary at the Catholic church the family attended.[1] Guyton received a BA from the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, in 1995. He moved to New York in 1996. Twice rejected for admission to the Whitney Independent Study Program,[1] he attended Hunter College's MFA program from 1996 to 1998.[2]
Early career
editWhile a student at Hunter College, Guyton counted Robert Morris among his teachers. Guyton first got a job at St. Mark's Bookshop in the East Village and then worked at Dia:Chelsea as a guard.[3] When Dia closed its Chelsea space in 2004, his severance pay allowed him to continue renting an East Village studio and apartment without having to look for another job.[4] He won the Foundation for Contemporary Arts Grants to Artists award (2004).[5]
Career
editArtistic practice
editGuyton's early "drawings" from around 2003, are filled with black Xs over ripped-out book pages. The color black and the letter X became signature motifs.[3] His tool is an Epson Stylus Pro 9600 inkjet printer, a machine used for large-format prints. Using a computer, Guyton produces paintings. Since 2005, Guyton has worked on canvas.[6] Typically Guyton's work is exhibited in a series.
In a statement of 2004, Guyton said:
Recently I've been using Epson inkjet printers and flatbed scanners as tools to make works that act like drawings, paintings, even sculptures. I spend a lot of time with books and so logically I've ended up using pages from books as material- pages torn from books and fed through an inkjet printer. I've been using a very pared down vocabulary of simple shapes and letters drawn or typed in Microsoft Word, then printed on top of these pages from catalogues, magazines, posters- and even blank canvas. The resulting images aren't exactly what the machines are designed for - slick digital photographs. There is often a struggle between the printer and my material - and the traces of this are left on the surface: snags, drips, streaks, mis-registrations, blurs.[7]
New York Times Paintings
In November 2016, Guyton exhibits a new series of New York Times Paintings that show headlines about violence around the world and news leading up to the 2016 US Presidential Election. The exhibition opens the day after Hillary Clinton loses the election to Donald Trump.
Jason Farago in the New York Times writes “Mr. Guyton’s paintings … do not depict pages of a newspaper at all — they depict the website of a media company that publishes news in many formats. That is a significant difference. As he told The Times in 2012, “I chose the computer because it was right here” — and while making screenshots of the website permits this least emotional of painters a rare dose of topicality, Mr. Guyton also treats nytimes.com as a kind of default.”
The Serpentine Gallery in London described Guyton’s work as underscoring, “The studio’s potential, not just as a locus for discussion and production, but as a material in and of itself.” His exhibition Das New Yorker Atelier in 2017 was a collaboration with Museum Brandhorst in Munich, Germany. Guyton exhibited paintings that depicted artworks in process in his studio in the Lower East Side of Manhattan. Three studio assistants are also depicted in a moment of conversation in the kitchen of his studio. The title of the exhibition makes a reference to a painting by Swiss artist Hans Jakob Oeri entitled Das Pariser Atelier.[9]
In 2018, the artist makes another work that shows studio assistants from behind scrutinizing a work on the wall. The exhibition Patagonia presumably took its title from the graphics printed on the t shirt of one of the figures in the painting.
Artist associations
editGuyton also makes collaborative works with fellow artists Kelley Walker and Stephen Prina. Along with artists like Walker, Seth Price and Tauba Auerbach, Guyton is regarded by some to be at the forefront of a generation that has been reconsidering both appropriation art and abstract art through the 21st-century lens of digital technology.[11] He is regarded as one of many contemporary painters revisiting late Modernism, alongside Tomma Abts, Mark Grotjahn, Eileen Quinlan, Sergei Jensen, and Cheyney Thompson.[12]
Guyton and Price operate the Leopard Press, which releases publications of their work and that of their friends.[13]
Exhibitions
editIn 2003, Guyton showed at Power House Memphis. Between 2004-14 exhibitions of his work were held at Kunstverein Hamburg; Portikus, Frankfurt am Main; Museum Ludwig, Cologne; Museum Dhondt-Dhaenens, Belgium; Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; Kunsthaus Bregenz, Austria; Wiener Secession, Vienna; Kunsthalle Zürich, Zürich. In 2005, then-MoMA PS1 director Klaus Biesenbach included Guyton's inkjet panels in a room with fellow newcomers Seth Price and Josh Smith.[14] The following year, curators Daniel Birnbaum and Hans Ulrich Obrist included Guyton/Walker's brightly colored stacks of paint cans in their "Uncertain States of America" survey at Astrup Fearnley Museum of Modern Art in Oslo.[14]
In 2009, Guyton and Kelley Walker were invited by Birnbaum to participate at the Venice Biennale, where they exhibited canvases and pieces of drywall at the Palazzo delle Esposizioni.[15] For his 2012 retrospective at the Whitney Museum, Guyton created walls inspired by temporary partitions Marcel Breuer had made for the building in the 1960s.[11]
In 2019, the Museum Ludwig in Cologne, Germany organized a twenty-year retrospective of the artist. It was the artist’s third exhibition at the museum which has one of the largest collections of the artist’s works to date. The exhibition curated by Yilmaz Dziewior included 200 paintings, sculptures, a survey of works on paper, early photography and recent bronze sculptures. The exhibition catalogue was published by Verlag Walther Koenig. [16]
In an interview with Nicolas Trembley, Guyton says of the unusual organization of the exhibition, “It was the building that refused the chronological show, since some paintings need particular walls to be shown against. From there the exhibition could develop in a more unusual way, picking up lots of loose conceptual threads and temporarily making thematic narratives, or performing a more conventional pedagogical function. I also needed to figure out a way to keep myself interested in looking at all this old work, because this kind of retrospective thinking can sometimes get a little bit boring.”
In 2021, Guyton presented “The Undoing”, a suite of 26 paintings documenting the artist’s experience during the pandemic.
Guyton started the paintings in The Undoing during the lockdown in 2020. Images include news from the New York Times website, the artist taking his temperature, and photographs taken during Guyton’s exhibition at the Museum Ludwig in Cologne, which closed just before the start of the pandemic. The paintings were exhibited again at Glenstone Museum in Potomac in 2022.
Collections
editGuyton's works are in the collections of the Museum of Modern Art, New York; the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles; the Centre Pompidou in Paris; the Art Institute of Chicago; the Carnegie Museum in Pittsburgh, the Kunstmuseum Basel; the Pinakothek der Moderne in Munich; Museum Ludwig, Cologne; Kunsthaus Zürich; Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; Princeton University Art Museum; Dallas Museum of Art; FRAC, Ile de France; and the Musee d'Art Moderne et Contemporain in Geneva.[20]
Art market
editAs of 2013, Guyton's works regularly sell for more than $1 million at auction and privately.[21] An untitled Epson UltraChrome inkjet on linen of 2005 established an auction record for the artist when it sold for $2.4 million at Christie's New York in 2013.[22] In 2014, his flame painting Untitled (Fire, Red/Black U) (2005) sold to an unidentified telephone bidder for $3.525 million at Christie's, New York. Days before the auction the artist disgusted by the enormous price expected went on the offensive printing multiple copies of the painting and posted them on Instagram a few days before the auction [23] The painting was rumored to be guaranteed at $4 million.[24]
Guyton’s works along with Rudolf Stingel and Christopher Wool were at the center of the Inigo Philbrick case in which collectors were defrauded.
Guyton works with Matthew Marks Gallery from New York, Galleria Gió Marconi in Milan, Galerie Gisela Capitain from Cologne, Galerie Francesca Pia from Zurich and Galerie Chantal Crousel in Paris.[27]
Catalogues
edit- Buchhandlung Walther König, Köln, 2006 Color, Power & Style, ISBN 978-3-86560-089-9
- Buchhandlung Walther König, Köln, 2010 Zeichnungen für ein großes Bild, ISBN 978-3-86560-814-7
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b Peter Schjeldahl (October 15, 2012), Man and Machine: A Wade Guyton retrospective The New Yorker.
- ^ Grant Recipients - Wade Guyton Foundation for Contemporary Arts, New York.
- ^ a b David Armstrong, Wade Guyton Interview Magazine.
- ^ Carol Vogel (September 27, 2012), Currently, Painting, Rebooted New York Times.
- ^ "Wade Guyton :: Foundation for Contemporary Arts". www.foundationforcontemporaryarts.org. Retrieved 2018-04-19.
- ^ Exhibition 155: Wade Guyton, September 27 - November 9, 2008 Portikus, Frankfurt.
- ^ "404 Page Not Found". www.foundationforcontemporaryarts.org.
{{cite web}}
: Cite uses generic title (help) - ^ Farago, Jason (2017-01-05). "Wade Guyton Packs Information in 'The New York Times Paintings'". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2022-11-19.
- ^ "Wade Guyton – Das New Yorker Atelier | Museum Brandhorst". Wade Guyton – Das New Yorker Atelier | Museum Brandhorst. Retrieved 2022-11-19.
- ^ Press, Clayton. "Just Who Does He Think He Is? Wade Guyton In New York And Zürich". Forbes. Retrieved 2022-11-19.
- ^ a b Carol Vogel (September 27, 2012), Painting, Rebooted New York Times.
- ^ Roberta Smith (September 22, 2006), Art in Review; Mark Grotjahn New York Times.
- ^ Andrew Russeth (September 9, 2015), Bookish: On the Art World’s Publishing Boom ARTnews.
- ^ a b Kelly Crow (December 7, 2012), Searching for the Next Art-World Star Wall Street Journal.
- ^ David Armstrong (August 3, 2012), Wade Guyton Interview.
- ^ "Wade Guyton - Museum Ludwig, Cologne". www.museum-ludwig.de. Retrieved 2022-11-19.
- ^ "Interview with Wade Guyton, radical artist on view at the Ludwig Museum". Numéro Magazine. Retrieved 2022-11-19.
- ^ "WADE GUYTON The Undoing | Matthew Marks Gallery". WADE GUYTON The Undoing | Matthew Marks Gallery. Retrieved 2022-11-19.
- ^ "Glenstone Museum's Fall 2022 Exhibitions to Include Presentations by R.H. Quaytman and Wade Guyton". www.glenstone.org. Retrieved 2022-11-19.
- ^ Wade Guyton, November 13 - December 15, 2007 Friedrich Petzel Gallery, New York.
- ^ Scott Reyburn (October 24, 2013), Wrecked Ferrari Sells for $250,000, Basquiat $5 Million Bloomberg.
- ^ Wade Guyton, Untitled (2005) Christie's Post-War and Contemporary Evening Sale, 12 November 2013, New York.
- ^ Carol Vogel (May 13, 2014), At Christie’s Auction, an Experiment Proves Fruitful New York Times.
- ^ Jerry Saltz (May 12, 2014), [1] New York Magazine.
- ^ Kinsella, Eileen (2020-02-04). "Art Investors Go to War Over Disgraced Dealer Inigo Philbrick's Scheme to Sell Stakes in a $1 Million Wade Guyton Painting". Artnet News. Retrieved 2022-11-19.
- ^ Bernstein, Jacob (2020-03-13). "The Talented Mr. Philbrick". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2022-11-19.
- ^ Carol Vogel (June 19, 2014), At Art Basel, Works With a Museum Presence New York Times.