Purple Split 7, 2023
Oil on linen
152.4 x 213.4 cm (60 x 84 in)
The tripartite compositions bring to mind early studies of movement, as well as iconic film sequences such as the mirror maze shooting in Orson Welles’s The Lady from Shanghai (1947). As a visual device, the split screen also resonates with today’s digital framework, demonstrating Katz’s continued awareness of how society looks at images.
Alex Katz
Purple Split 10, 2023
Oil on linen
182.9 x 304.8 cm (72 x 120 in)
Purple Split 10, 2023
Charcoal and red chalk on kraft paper
182.9 x 304.8 cm (72 x 120 in)
Katz sketches out his portraits, most often over a single, hour-long sitting, before scaling up the image onto large-scale cartoons whose outlines he transfers through a pouncing technique – the same method employed by Renaissance painters for mapping out frescoes. These drawings provide us with an insight into the artist’s practice, revealing the traditional process that underpins Katz’s sleek and ‘dazzling’ paintings, as they are often described.
Alex Katz
Purple Split 7, 2022
Charcoal and red chalk on kraft paper
152.4 x 213.4 cm (60 x 84 in)
cartoon for the painting An Allegory or Vision of a Knight, c.1504
Pen and brown ink on paper, pricked for transfer
18.2 x 21.4 cm (7.17 x 8.43 in)
British Museum, London
Katz has always defined himself as a painter of ‘the immediate present’. His portraits, like his landscapes, capture a moment, not as an exact likeness, but in terms of its single, irreproducible essence. As Ewa Lajer-Burcharth argues in her essay for the Guggenheim exhibition catalogue: ‘multiplication [suggests] a desire to evacuate all psychic content from the portrait’. Utilising montage as a visual strategy, it is the essence of his sitter Ariel that Katz distils through the many facets of her appearance.
Alex KatzPurple Split 2, 2022
Oil on linen
182.9 x 121.9 cm (72 x 48 in)