Showing posts with label Rose Wylie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rose Wylie. Show all posts

01/08/25

Rose Wylie @ Zentrum Paul Klee, Bern - "Flick and Float" Retrospective Exhibition

Rose Wylie. Flick and Float
Zentrum Paul Klee, Bern 
19 July - 5 October 2025 

Rose Wylie Photo in her studio
Rose Wylie in her studio
, June 2023
Photograph: Will Grundy
© Rose Wylie. Courtesy the artist and David Zwirner

Rose Wylie. Flick and Float presents the nonconformist and fascinating work of the British artist Rose Wylie (b. 1934). Her unique artistic practice has won her international recognition. In her large-format paintings, Rose Wylie strips down figurative representations to their essentials. Expressive, direct and full of subversive humour, these works testify to her engagement with pop culture, film and art history. With more than fifty paintings and around a dozen drawings, the Zentrum Paul Klee is showing a retrospective of Wylie’s work over the last thirty years. New works have been made for the exhibition.

Rose Wylie
Rose Wylie
Dinner Outside, 2024
Oil on canvas, 183 × 328 cm, two parts
© Rose Wylie. Courtesy the artist and David Zwirner
Photo: Jack Hems

Rose Wylie
Rose Wylie
Lilith and Gucci Boy, 2024
Oil on canvas, 207 × 306 cm, two parts
© Rose Wylie. Courtesy the artist and David Zwirner
Photo: Jack Hems

Rose Wylie - An unconventional career: from reading to seeing

The ninety-year-old artist lives and works in a cottage not far from London. Rose Wylie received her artistic training at Folkestone and Dover School of Art, Goldsmiths College and the Royal College of Art in London. While raising her three children, she put her artistic career on pause, and, alongside her family life, spent a lot of time reading books. It was not until the late 1990s that seeing took over from reading again, as Rose Wylie explained on a visit to her studio in March 2024. She started devoting herself intensively to painting again, and finally achieved international recognition with her unique work and major solo exhibitions, at Tate Britain in London and elsewhere. The Zentrum Paul Klee is devoting a major retrospective to Rose Wylie featuring over fifty paintings and around a dozen drawings. The artist has painted eight works specially for the exhibition, which are being shown to a museum-going public for the first time in the Zentrum Paul Klee.

Rose Wylie
Rose Wylie
Jesus of Prague, 1989
Oil on canvas, 184 × 183 cm
© Rose Wylie. Courtesy the artist and David Zwirner
Photo: Anna Arca

Rose Wylie
Rose Wylie
Manor, 2004
Oil on canvas, 183 × 188 cm
Courtesy the artist and David Zwirner
Photo: Soon-Hak Kwon
© Rose Wylie
Photograph courtesy of Jari Lager

Rose Wylie
Rose Wylie
The Fat Controller, 2006
Oil on canvas, 366 × 248 cm, four parts
Courtesy the artist and David Zwirner
Photo: Soon-Hak Kwon
© Rose Wylie
Photograph courtesy of Jari Lager

Rose Wylie - Inspiration from pop culture, film and art history

Rose Wylie’s large-format works, made in the studio on the first floor of her cottage, reflect a deep understanding of pop culture, film and art history. She often works with a subversive humour that also connects her to Paul Klee. Stripped down to its essentials, and with a highly expressive lightness of touch, her artistic language references an aesthetic of ‘bad painting’ and post pop. On closer examination, Wylie’s works prove to be sharply observed and subtly polished meditations on the nature of humanity.

Rose Wylie
Rose Wylie
Singing Life Model, 2017
Oil on canvas, 169 × 182 cm
Karen and Mark Smith
© Rose Wylie. Courtesy the artist and David Zwirner
Photo: Anna Arca

Rose Wylie
Rose Wylie
Yellow Strip, 2006
Oil on canvas, 183 × 777 cm, five parts
© Rose Wylie. Courtesy the artist and David Zwirner
Photo: Jack Hems

For Rose Wylie, the process by which a painting is made often begins with a visual stimulus. No limits are placed on her inspiration. As indicated by the title of the exhibition, Flick and Float – the artist’s own suggestion – in her working process Wylie ‘flicks’ through a flood of images until a motif attracts her attention. The motif might be a newspaper photograph on her studio floor, a scene from a film, an everyday situation from her life, an artwork or a picture that she found while surfing the internet. What the motifs share, however, is always a special detail that does not match the norm – ‘Toujours la difference!’ is a phrase of which Rose Wylie is particularly fond. So for example, in Singing Life Model, Rose Wylie shows a photographic model posing with a strangely opened mouth, while Yellow Strip shows the football star Ronaldinho with his characteristically thin pony tail, which whips in time with his every movement on the pitch.

Rose Wylie - Painting from memory

Rose Wylie usually begins by capturing her visual impressions in drawings. The drawings in the exhibition provide an insight into her creative process. Rose Wylie does not return to the reference material, but with a few strokes reduces the picture in her memory to what she sees as essential. Speaking of her ‘Film Notes’, for example, she explains:
‘When I do film paintings, I usually work from memory […] – I do not go back to the film or to film stills to check… It’s the original visual excitement I want to work with.’
Rose Wylie, on the letter ‘F’ in the A–Z of the catalogue Rose Wylie. Flick and Float
Rose Wylie then reworks the drawing until the composition and central details are consistent. If lines have to be corrected, Rose Wylie does not erase them, but sticks a new piece of paper over them, which sometimes makes the sketches look like collages. This process of discovery is also repeated on the big canvases in Wylie’s studio. Where necessary, Rose Wylie scrapes the oil paint off again and adds whole new parts of canvases. This genesis provides the second part of the exhibition title, because Rose Wylie describes the process by which her works are created as ‘floating’.

Rose Wylie - Compositional investigations with picture and writing 

Rose Wylie
Rose Wylie
Bagdad Cafe (Film Notes), 2015
Oil on canvas, 182 × 372 cm, two parts
Courtesy of the British Council Collection
Photo: Soon-Hak Kwon
© Rose Wylie. Courtesy the artist
Photograph courtesy of Jari Lager

Rose Wylie develops pictorial compositions that go beyond traditional perspectival representation. In her multi-panel works, for example, she juxtaposes apparently disparate images, giving rise to visual rhymes and resonances. One example is the two-part work Bagdad Cafe (Film Notes): while in the left half of the painting Rose Wylie reworks visual stimuli from the film of the same name, in the right half she shows scenes from her everyday life – including a flower from her garden, her own mouth when eating and a coffee stain.
‘I spell often phonetically – I paint how things look and I spell how things sound.’
Rose Wylie, in an interview with Fabienne Eggelhöfer during a visit to her studio in January 2025
Rose Wylie also includes writing as part of the composition of her works. What is central here is not so much the content of what is written as the form and arrangement of the letters on the picture surface. She places the writing deliberately to perfect her compositions. The process of writing is more important than the correct way of writing. For this reason Rose Wylie often writes words as she hears them, spelled incorrectly. Her writing style can be experienced in the A–Z section of the exhibition catalogue. In reflections on 26 ideas, Rose Wylie provides a deeper insight into her intellectual world.

Rose Wylie - Biography

Rose Wylie was born in 1934 in Hythe, in Kent in England. She lived with her family in India until the age of five. Her return to England coincided with the outbreak of the Second World War, which Rose Wylie experienced as a child.

Beginning in 1952 she studied painting at Folkestone and Dover School of Art. From 1956 she continued her training at Goldsmiths College in London with a view to teaching. It was here that she met her husband, the artist Roy Oxlade. When their first child was born she put her artistic career on pause and concentrated on the family. In the 1970s she taught painting at Sittingbourne College of Further Education. From 1979 she resumed her artistic activity by studying for a Masters at the Royal College of Art in London.

She began to submit her works for exhibitions with an open application procedure, which was how she came to be selected by Neo Rauch for EAST International at Norwich University of the Arts in 2004. In 2010 her works were shown in the exhibition Women to Watch at the National Museum of Women in the Arts in Washington, which led the feminist Germaine Greer to describe her as the ‘hottest new artist’ in an article in The Guardian. In 2013 she had her first institutional solo exhibition at Tate Britain in London, and won the renowned John Moores Painting Prize the following year. She was also appointed a Senior Royal Academician of the Royal Academy in London. Further exhibitions followed, including shows at the Serpentine Gallery in London (2017), in the Centro de Arte Contemporáneo in Málaga (2017), Aspen Art Museum in Colorado (2020), Hangaram Art Museum in Seoul (2021) and the Stedelijk Museum voor Actuele Kunst (S.M.A.K.) in Ghent (2022) to name only a few. Next year her works will be shown at the Royal Academy in London. 

Rose Wylie. Flick and Float - Catalogue of the exhibition
Rose Wylie. Flick and Float
Catalogue of the exhibition ; Snoeck Verlag, 2025
Published by Fabienne Eggelhöfer and Nina Zimmer
With an A–Z by Rose Wylie, photographs by Juergen Teller, 
as well as a foreword by Nina Zimmer, 
Director of the Kunstmuseum Bern – Zentrum Paul Klee, 
and an introduction by Fabienne Eggelhöfer, 
Chief Curator at the Zentrum Paul Klee.
136 pages ; Language: English ; ISBN 978-3-86442-464-9

Curator: Fabienne Eggelhöfer
Curatorial assistant: Josephine Rechberg

ZENTRUM PAUL KLEE 
Monument im Fruchtland 3, 3006 Bern

17/04/25

Rose Wylie @ David Zwirner, London - "When Found becomes Given" Exhibition + Rose Wylie Biography

Rose Wylie
When Found becomes Given 
David Zwirner, London
3 April – 23 May, 2025

Rose Wylie Artwork
ROSE WYLIE
Dinner Outside, 2024
© Rose Wylie. Courtesy the artist and David Zwirner

David Zwirner presents When Found becomes Given, an exhibition of paintings by British artist Rose Wylie at the gallery’s location in London. This presentation includes new and recent canvases and multipanel works that roam diverse chronologies and amalgamate the personal, symbolic, and historical—inhabiting real and imagined timelines within or even between different paintings. When Found becomes Given precedes Wylie’s forthcoming solo exhibition in the Main Galleries at the Royal Academy of Arts, London, which will open in February 2026.

Rose Wylie has become known for her uniquely recognisable, colourful, and exuberant compositions that appear aesthetically candid, not seeming to align with any discernible style or movement, but on closer inspection are revealed to be wittily observed and subtly sophisticated meditations on the nature of visual representation itself. The artist has long been interested in exploring perspectival and compositional strategies other than—and along with—traditional Renaissance perspective, frequently making numerous iterations of a given motif as a means of advancing her formal investigation. Working in both single- and multipanel formats, she regularly juxtaposes apparently disparate imagery, creating visual rhymes and resonances that coalesce into a unified composition. As curator Tanja Boon aptly notes, ‘[Wylie’s] paintings exemplify the artist’s ability to absorb powerful impressions from her immediate surroundings. They also illustrate her broad knowledge of cultural production, spanning popular and cliche styles as well as underexamined and non-Western visual traditions.’ [1]

The compositions presented in When Found becomes Given explore the fluid line between the moment when a work of art is discovered and the stage in which it is established as canonical. Recent paintings like Lilith and Gucci Boy (2024) combine ancient stories with contemporary references. In folklore, Adam’s ‘first wife’ Lilith was created at the same time and from the same clay as her spouse. Here, Rose Wylie inscribes the first feminist across the two panels of the diptych, honouring the mythological figure’s refusal to submit to Adam. She replaces him with a fresh avatar—a model wearing a suit from a Gucci advertisement. In an accompanying study on paper, Wylie articulates her source of inspiration: Lilith’s form is based on an Old Babylonian terracotta plaque that she first observed in the British Museum’s collection.

Similarly, in Nebuchadnezzar’s Dream (2023), the artist takes as her subject the legendary Babylonian emperor Nebuchadnezzar II and the biblical narrative describing his dream of a monumental man composed in four sections of gold, bronze, iron, and, for his feet, clay—an allegory that has been interpreted numerous times throughout the history of art. In her characteristic style, Wylie uses a strong contrasting palette that variously evokes the work of El Greco, Édouard Manet, and Matthias Grünewald. Other compositions demonstrate a more associative approach to colour choice. In Opera Singer & Teapot (2024), the pastel colours of the singer’s chiffon scarf, rendered as speckles around her neck, are taken from popular fabric designs from the time that Lily Pons, a French American soprano, was active. The white teapot she faces is an established fixture in Wylie’s home, bridging the past and present.

In her paintings, Wylie traverses personal and public histories as well as dreamscapes that encompass her pictorial world. Based on an earlier watercolor, A Dream (2024) confronts the viewer with the layered brick floor of the artist’s home. Wylie depicts herself as she experienced the dream: as an abstracted black stick figure dutifully scrubbing the floor. In the diptych Dinner Outside (2024), she illustrates on the left panel the arrival of guests and cars parked in front of the host’s home; on the right, she shows the scene after forty-fi ve minutes, the sky growing dusky and a dinner table set for a party. Within the composition, she introduces a dot motif—a pictographic representation of the pebbles atop which the cars are parked—and connects these to the widely used shorthand for green blades of grass that punctuate both panels and signify the outdoors. Rose Wylie sees Dinner Outside as a kind of schema: ‘The painting reminds me of a map, or a report from a seventeenth-century discovery ship, where the resident-artist has recorded the transport, habits, homes, and dress of some newly found “peoples” ... only here, it’s now, and I am the “people”.’ [2]

Also on view are a selection of older paintings that chart the development of Wylie’s recurring images and compositional style. The titular character of Yellow Henry (1996) is Henry IV, who reigned as King of England from 1399 to 1413, and is also the subject of a four-volume biography by the artist’s grandfather, the historian James Hamilton Wylie (1844–1914), who wrote a three-volume biography of Henry V as well. Here, she paints the facial profile of Henry IV in the center, his head outlined in green; this portrayal has appeared in other works, incorporated as a kind of mark of intergenerational Rose Wylie history.

ROSE WYLIE BIOGRAPHY

British artist Rose Wylie (b. 1934) studied at Folkestone and Dover School of Art, Kent, England, and the Royal College of Art, London, from which she graduated in 1981. The artist’s fi rst solo exhibition took place in 1985 at the Trinity Arts Centre, Kent. In recent years, she has had solo presentations at venues including the Rosenwald-Wolf Gallery, University of the Arts, Philadelphia (2012); Jerwood Gallery, Hastings, England (2012); Tate Britain, London (2013); Haugar kunstmuseum, Tønsberg, Norway (2013); Städtische Galerie Wolfsburg, Germany (2014); Douglas Hyde Gallery, Dublin (2015); Space K, Seoul (2016); Chapter Arts Centre, Cardiff, Wales (2016); Turner Contemporary, Margate, England (2016); Serpentine Gallery, London (2017); Plymouth Arts Centre and The Gallery at Plymouth College of Art, England (an exhibition that traveled to Newlyn Art Gallery & The Exchange, Cornwall, England); Centro de Arte Contemporáneo de Málaga, Spain (2018); and The Gallery at Windsor, Vero Beach, Florida (2020).

In 2020, where i am and was, the artist’s first solo museum presentation in the United States, was on view at the Aspen Art Museum in Colorado. Also in 2020, the solo exhibition Hullo Hullo Following-on was on view at the Hangaram Art Museum, Seoul, before traveling to the Aram Nuri Arts Center, Goyang, South Korea, in 2021. A solo exhibition of the artist’s work was on view at the Museum Langmatt, Baden, Switzerland, in 2021. In 2022, the Stedelijk Museum voor Actuele Kunst (S.M.A.K.), Ghent, Belgium, presented the exhibition picky people notice…
.
Rose Wylie is the recipient of the John Moores Painting Prize, presented by the Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool, in 2014, and the same year was also elected a senior academician to the Royal Academy of Arts. In 2015, she received the Royal Academy of Arts’ Charles Wollaston Award. In 2018, she received the South Bank Sky Arts Award in recognition of her exhibition at the Serpentine Galleries the previous year and was awarded an OBE (Officer of the Order of the British Empire) for her services to art.

The artist’s work has been represented by David Zwirner since 2017. Wylie’s first exhibitions with the gallery include Horse, Bird, Cat (London, 2016), Lolita’s House (London, 2018), and painting a noun… (Hong Kong, 2020). In 2021, David Zwirner presented Which One, the artist’s first solo exhibition at the gallery’s New York location. The solo exhibition Car and girls was on view at David Zwirner London in 2022, and CLOSE, not too close was on view at David Zwirner Los Angeles in 2023. Wylie lives and works in Kent, England.

Wylie’s work can be found in prominent collections throughout the United States, Europe, and Asia, including Arario Museum, Seoul; Hammer Museum, Los Angeles; High Museum of Art, Atlanta; Jerwood Art Foundation, United Kingdom; National Museum of Women in the Arts, Washington, DC; Portland Museum of Art, Maine; Royal Academy of Arts, London; Space K, Seoul; Städtische Galerie Wolfsburg, Germany; Stedelijk Museum voor Actuele Kunst (S.M.A.K.), Ghent, Belgium; Tate, United Kingdom; and Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool.

[1] Tanja Boon, ‘To paint without a duster,’ in Rose Wylie: picky people notice…. Exh. cat. (Ghent, Belgium: Stedelijk Museum voor Actuele Kunst, 2022), p. 55.
[2] The artist, in conversation with the gallery, January 2025.

DAVID ZWIRNER
24 Grafton Street, London W1S 4EZ

10/01/16

Rose Wylie @ Turner Contemporary, Margate, Kent

Rose Wylie
Turner Contemporary, Margate, Kent
12 January - 31 March 2016

Rose Wylie
Rose Wylie 
Pink Table Cloth (Close-up) (Film Notes), 2013. 
Oil on Canvas 207 x 330 cm. 
Image courtesy of the artist and UNION Gallery, London.

To open 2016 in Turner Contemporary’s ground floor Sunley Gallery, the world-class gallery is showing a group of paintings and works on paper by celebrated Kent-based artist Rose Wylie.

Wylie’s bold, large-scale figurative paintings draw on ancient and folk art, such as Mexican street art and contemporary Egyptian Hajj painting, as well as art history and film. Their deliberate awkwardness, closer to the unselfconscious art of children, includes a collage-like approach in which mistakes are simply covered up with patches of cut-up canvas or paper.

This display, the first time the Sunley gallery has been used for painting, includes seven large-scale paintings, which can be viewed at balcony and ground floor level, as well as eight works on paper.

The inspiration for Wylie’s paintings often comes from a particular sight or visual moment that strikes her with a “special quality” that she tries to capture through her own language of painting. The Manufacturers, for example, originated from a newspaper photograph of a public apology by toy company Mattel, whose particular symmetry and formality reminded Wylie of Spanish 16th century still-life painting.

Rose Wylie
Rose Wylie 
Theatre Painting (Black Spots), 2015. 
Oil on Canvas 183 x 322 cm. 
Image courtesy of the artist and UNION Gallery, London.

The display also includes four works from Film Notes, a series of paintings inspired by remembered images from contemporary films. An avid and discerning film fan, her recent paintings and drawings have paid homage to directors as diverse as François Ozon, Werner Herzog, Claudia Llosa and Quentin Tarantino. Drawn to theatricality and fascinated by costume, Wylie responds to the dramatic and surreal image of a secret meeting in the desert from the film Syriana in Pink Tablecloth (Close Up) and Pink Tablecloth (Long Shot). In Bagdad Café (Film Notes) Wylie uses text to focus attention on the ‘white frock’ which is her equivalent to actor Marianne Sägebrecht’s iconic brown pleated suit and hat in the film.

ARTIST ROSE WYLIE

Rose Wylie was born in Kent, where she still lives and works. She studied at Folkestone and Dover School of Art (1952-6) and the Royal College of Art, London (1979-81) and now, in her early eighties, is enjoying renewed interest in her work in the UK and internationally with recent exhibitions at the Jerwood, Hastings (2012) and Tate Britain (BP Spotlight, 2013), as well as winning the prestigious John Moores painting prize in 2014. In 2010, Wylie was described by Germaine Greer as ‘Britain’s hottest new artist’.

TURNER CONTEMPORARY 
Rendezvous, Margate, CT9 1HG
www.turnercontemporary.org