2/01/2006

Les Rogers

50 comments:

  1. This is beautiful. Must see the show. It's kind of disturbing but tender in the lip area.

    ReplyDelete
  2. This is not the image that I wanted to post, but it was the only one I can find from his current show at Leo Koenig. I wanted to post the one with the model eating grapes.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Who is this guy? Is his show still up? Looks pretty nice... would like to see more.

    p.s. I like burritos. A lot.

    ReplyDelete
  4. LES ROGERS
    Recent Paintings
    January 28th, 2006 through March 4th, 2006

    Leo Koenig Inc.
    23 street.

    ReplyDelete
  5. i am crying.

    ReplyDelete
  6. So it's bad? There's a lot of bad right now, eh?

    ReplyDelete
  7. Theres a Kippenberger reference in the show. Im not agianst that sort of thing. But it does point to a sort of academicism that I see mirrored in the Paint.

    I''ve been to the edge, and there I looked down. You know, I like it craaaaaazy. And these are not.

    ReplyDelete
  8. This comment has been removed by the author.

    ReplyDelete
  9. From the site:

    "one soon discovers, for example, that added to the mix are explicit or implicit references to significant works of art. Here Rogers expands on a post-modernist approach, conceding to the equanimity of images while suggesting a specific art-historical lineage. Eventually a progression is alluded to, a dynamic, impulsive beauty is revealed, and a distinct visual language becomes evident.

    I'll just get my decoder ring out right now. Or ooh, I''l make up my own substitution code. I dunno, I like the sense of humor but the subject matter is trite.

    Go back to Jermany. I mean Jersey. What are you running from? Was the spoon wooden plastic or sterling?

    ReplyDelete
  10. This show felt really uneven to me, it has these spaced-out girls that look like photos from 'The Face" or "I-D" then these weird abstracto paintings and they don't really seem to connect. I like the girls a lot though, but they only feel about 90% finished, he could have worked on them more.

    ReplyDelete
  11. They are all of one girl he meet on the internet. She is 18 and from Texas. They flew her out for the opening. I meet her she was beautiful and adorable. I think she sent him all the picutes of herself via email.

    ReplyDelete
  12. and they look great on the invitation and on the jpeg here, but in person they're a bit weaker. Kind of like when you meet somebody online - everyone looks better when their face is shrunk to a 1 x 1 inch square! Then you meet them in person and you're all "AAAhhh... nice to meet you...!"

    ReplyDelete
  13. I feel dumb for liking the lips. Must see in person.

    ReplyDelete
  14. Most subject matter is trite. Come on! That is completely unfair. If you ask most artist's what their work is about it sounds pretty dumb. There are wordless impulses that make meaning.

    ReplyDelete
  15. i hate artist statement. hate.

    ReplyDelete
  16. they are too hollow and hip. too eighties. too photographic. too perfect. les is a powerful painter but these are methodical and unemotive. maybe he is in love the the girl and it has clouded his judgment. if that is the case, it's ok. paintings made from love are ok with me, i just want to see the love. in these i don't even see a love of painting.

    ReplyDelete
  17. Love! Here here!

    I think people should reference the KJ bible more often. I'm a HUGE fan of the Apocrypha.

    ReplyDelete
  18. zipthwung are you going to ruin this place like you did artforum.com with your unbearably annoying and obnoxious comments? go home. this is for reading what other people have to say, not re-reading what you had to say yourself with one hand down your pants.

    ReplyDelete
  19. huh, and I thought I was adding to the conversation. You're a Bully.

    Anyhoo, I was adressing subject matter. What do these paintings have that other people dont have? There was a painter that did a painting of a Rubiks cube. Jerry Saltz, I think, said something to the effect of "clever" which is what all my teachers said when I was talking about some theory or other. Its a put down. I think theres the need to be "smart" that gets in the way of the "love".

    This split is more than just a conceptual-experiential divide.

    In closing, hire a good writer to write your statement.

    ReplyDelete
  20. zipthung might be the real bully.

    ReplyDelete
  21. i will go and see them in person, but it looks like one of those situations where someone takes a photo and then turns it into a painting. i dont find that interesting and cant understand the reason people feel compelled to do this. just show the damn photo if you like it so much!

    ReplyDelete
  22. well, i don't think it's quite that simplistic...

    ReplyDelete
  23. I agree with Ms. L. Granted, all photo-based work is different (slightly) but this really doesn't add to any discussion of his process (by that I mean the way one projects the image and then fills it in.) There's potential for them to be sweet, well painted works, but not much more...
    I also agree that a conceptual device, whether it instigates the painting or is tacked on afterward, doesn't help the work in a press release, it can only hurt - at best, have no affect.

    ReplyDelete
  24. But look her neck is way too narrow and she looks kind of like a tard. That's something. I agree with the photo-based painting problem...it's all how you handle the medium and the little decisions to distort or leave out information that either make or break that kind of work. There is nothing inherently wrong with using photos as a source, but if you are self-consciously referencing the idea of photography for no apparent purpose, not supporting or constructively undermining the narrative or content of the image, then it's just annoying.

    I still think. The lips. The look of the tard. At least in jpeg form it is pleasing to me. On this blog, many things are pleasing that wouldn't be in real life. It's so different from looking at the real thing, it's fun. Sometimes I forget to bring all of my jaded negatory attitude that I normally have in Chelsea.

    ReplyDelete
  25. Alex Katz once said.
    "It is true, I work from life, but most of the other people who do aren't as interesting as these people. The thing is to make an interesting painting. How you make it doesn't matter much."

    ReplyDelete
  26. That quote says it all...

    ReplyDelete
  27. i think using photos as source material is very different than what this painting seems to be doing. which is taking a photo and making a painting of it. so her necks a little too whatever. its still just a slight distortion of a photograph and you can tell.

    ReplyDelete
  28. the alex katz quote is great tho. and his paintings dont look like copies of photos, whether they are or not, he transforms them into something else that is, i think, more timeless.
    anyway, mm, you are right. its completely different to look at art online than seeing it in person. and i havent even seen the show! i tried but they were still installing.

    ReplyDelete
  29. How can you identify "timelessness"? No doubt Alex Katz is a much better painter but that word is a problem.

    ReplyDelete
  30. How can you identify "good" or "bad"?

    ReplyDelete
  31. Right, how can you identify anything? What is a hammer?

    Good and bad are subjective, you can provide an explanation to back up your opinion. People may agree with you or not and critical mass may or may not be reached.

    Timeless? Like a Quartz watch? I don't understand. Timeless like not referring to the trends of the time? It would be cool to have more of an explanation of what ms lb means by it. Maybe you can explain it.

    ReplyDelete
  32. timeless

    adj : unaffected by time; "few characters are so timeless as Hamlet"; "Helen's timeless beauty"


    I just see the adjective applied by MsL as part of an opinion. Maybe you disagree with the opinion or would like her to flesh it out, but I don't see the word as 'problematic'.

    ReplyDelete
  33. There was a time when painting like this was in style. Therefore in the context of that history it is not timeless. This time included such luminaries as Alex Katz on down to Nagel and Peter Max. Why is it that Katz feels "warmer" than Nagel, who leave me cold?

    ReplyDelete
  34. oh and anonymous - take your anger elsewhere

    ReplyDelete
  35. Maybe it's because Alex Katz's paintings feel straightforward that they are warmer or timeless? He isn't commenting on anything, necessarily, he is making deft, economical, sensitive paintings that show the love for his subject, the love that WW wants so badly to feel, that is missing here...but it is kind of mysterious, how some people's paint handling is inherently warmer and more engaging, rather than cool and trendy...

    ReplyDelete
  36. Oops I said inherently twice. That is annoying.

    ReplyDelete
  37. well i just went and checked out this show. i liked it!! but sadly the one posted was not my favorite, no offense at all painter, i know you said it wasnt yours either. but the other works are much more...shit im afraid to use any descriptive words or someone will yell at me!! this site gets pretty mean sometimes! anyway, beautiful paintings. my least fave the two that are most obviously photo-based.

    ReplyDelete
  38. I know. People are scary on blogs. But it's part of the entertainment also.

    ReplyDelete
  39. Ms lb, I am glad you went and I am sorry you feel or felt under attack. I agree with you on the Katz and timeless comment.
    I wonder what artist everyone will get behind. I guess we are getting behind Katz today.

    ReplyDelete
  40. Can't wait for tomorrow's artist!

    ReplyDelete
  41. hey i wish everyone would agree to disagree on this site, and not worry too much about hurting people's feelings if they expressing opinions. i dont like the "take your anger elsewhere" comments. for crissakes, the thing that's amazing about this website is that you can thrash it out. keep on going!

    ReplyDelete
  42. Ahh, the figure's left eye in this painting is drifting off all by itself. On its current trajectory it's going to find the Pacific Ocean. Surprised that with 45 comments no one mentioned it.

    ReplyDelete
  43. i'm surprised that w/ 45 comments no one brought up newer painters than alex katz or kippenberger (i dont get that reference at all); what about rogers' connection w/ other photo-painting people such as Richard Phillips or Blake Rayne or even Pieter Schoolwerth, etc? i dont mean the way the paintings look, i mean the painting from a photo thing.

    ReplyDelete
  44. Kippenberger made a sculpture of a "lamp for drunks" that is in one of the paintings in the show. I dunno, these sorts of references are fun, and "part of the conversation" we are all having about you know, stuff.

    Husker Du?

    http://www.thirdav.com/hd_images/bob_rs.jpg

    ReplyDelete
  45. Anonymous, why do you criticize the thread for not bringing these things up, rather than just bringing them up. Instead of sharing your idea you critique the forum? Very naughty. You may deserve a spanking.

    ReplyDelete
  46. im suprised no one mentions Frank Frazetta...he's the bomb. People used to paint using the palette of Rembrandt. Now its all neon this and cadmium that.

    I mean, black straight from the tube - thats where its at.

    ReplyDelete
  47. i don't know anything about this artist personally, but whether or not the image of a "hipster artist type" is actually self-referential to the artist's person or relationship to youth culture, it comes off as that. reggae music lyrics are often inane + useless because the artists often sing about reggae music itself and it creates a loop. this is somehow self referential in that way to me and it renders it meaningless.

    ReplyDelete
  48. vaughn bode and who? frank frazettaaaaa

    ReplyDelete

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.