Matthew Marks is pleased to announce
Stanley Whitney: How Black is That Blue, the next exhibition in his galleries at 1062
North Orange Grove and 7818 Santa Monica Boulevard.
This is Whitney’s first full-scale exhibition in Los
Angeles, and it includes twelve new paintings.
Whitney’s paintings have a consistent structure that
provides a stage for his bold use of color and
gesture. One element of this structure is the canvas
itself: for the past three decades, with rare
exceptions, Whitney has made predominantly square
paintings. Whitney’s other structural element is the
composition he employs: stacked rectangles of
varying sizes, separated by horizontal lines the
width of his brush. In this arrangement, which seems
to extend beyond the canvas, figure merges with
ground, allowing color to provide all of the work’s
weight, density, and space. As the artist explains,
“I wanted something very simple that would allow the
color to have life.”
Whitney works from the top of the painting to the
bottom, conceiving the blocks of color as distinct
monochromes, some made with diaphanous layers,
others applied in a single opaque coat. Like a
musical arrangement, his compositional system allows
room for improvisation, harmony, and syncopation,
and each color block gives rise to the next, a
process he compares to the call and response motif
in jazz. But music is not the only inspiration for
his paintings; he has also cited architecture, both
ancient and modern. While all buildings share the
same fundamental elements, they provide their
inhabitants with an almost infinite range of
psychological experiences. As Whitney has said of
his paintings, “If you live with them, it’s like
mentally wandering. They are always changing. To me
it’s like looking out the window.”
Stanley Whitney (b. 1946) has had one-person
exhibitions at museums including the Modern Art
Museum in Forth Worth, Texas, and the Studio Museum
in Harlem, New York. His work was also featured in
Documenta 14 (2017) and the 50th Venice Biennale
(2003). His first full-scale museum survey will open
in 2023 at the Albright-Knox Art Gallery’s new
Buffalo AKG Art Museum. Whitney lives and works in
New York.
Stanley Whitney: How Black is That Blue
is on view by appointment at 1062 North Orange Grove
and 7818 Santa Monica Boulevard from February 13 to
April 10, 2021. To make an appointment, please
click here. For additional information, please contact
Jacqueline Tran at 323-654-1830 or
jacqueline@matthewmarks.com.