Black Roses 3, 2025
Oil on linen
152.9 × 91.6 cm (60.2 × 36.06 in)
Black Roses 15, 2025
Oil on linen
122.8 × 92.1 cm (47.99 × 35.98 in)
Katz began painting wild flowers in the 1960s, finding in them the sense of movement he felt was absent from portraiture. In 1966, for the first time, they became the main subject of a series of monumental paintings. ‘It started in the rain,’ the artist has stated. ‘I cut flowers and put them in a vase, and started painting them. Years later, it’s the same process, but this time around, I was more interested in the flowers rather than the vase.’ While the depiction of flowers in art has historically taken on a variety of meanings, ranging from from Baroque ornamentation to the symbolism of 17th-century Dutch still lifes, Katz’s roses take on a meaning all their own, or as Prudence Peiffer writes in the exhibition catalogue for Katz’s Guggenheim retrospective: ‘there is no more serious flower than Katz’s […] he makes these familiar objects a little unknowable.’