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Early Work

Troy Brauntuch - Early Work
A large selection of drawings from Brauntuch's early carreer, based upon iconographic resources from the Third Reich.
Over the course of his four-decade long practice, Brauntuch has appropriated obscure images from a breadth of sources, and rendered works in the dark, alluring medium of pigment on black cotton or black paper. Crucial to this body of work is drawing, and Brauntuch commits his compositions with skillful subtlety using white pastel and other mediums to create ghost-like, obfuscating traces. Early Work marks the first time this selection of large works, created between 1976 and 1983, have been exhibited together. Each work, selected by the artist and borrowed from both private and public collections, demonstrates Brauntuch's long-standing practice of exploring the re-presentation of images and documentation: In the case of Early Work, the sources were produced in Germany under the Third Reich.
Published on the occasion of the eponymous exhibition at Petzel Gallery, New York, from November 4, 2015, to January 16, 2016.
A member of the so-called "Pictures Generation," Troy Brauntuch (*1954)—whose career spans some three decades—has often been characterized, with his peer Jack Goldstein, as taking a postmodern attitude toward representation. He is well known for his works from the end of the 1970s and beginning of the 1980s in which he decontextualized what would otherwise be hyperbolically charged content. For example, as Johanna Burton puts it, "a 1977 series of photographic screenprints with the simple title "1 2 3" was made using borrowed imagery: unremarkable sketches of a tank, a vestibule, and a stage set. There is no accompanying caption or other text with which to site these fragmentary clues, whose immediate capacity to signify has been temporarily tampered with. The appropriated sketches were, it turns out, penned by Adolf Hitler, whose name, of course, once divulged, imparts overwhelming significance to otherwise rather insignificant images."
In his most recent work, Brauntuch extends his investigations to the space between a thing and our idea of it. If he is still leaning on the photographic even while utilizing a variety of media, in his conté crayon works on black cotton, explains Burton, "the images feel as though they were conjured from the deep recesses of phantasmic space. What appear at first to be monochromatic canvases reveal photo-derived images (a woman's polka-dotted coat, the supine form of a cat) that coagulate and rise to the surface, barely there. In his photographs, everyday objects assert their ephemerality, and a tangible, intimate silence seems as much a part of the pictures as the simple domestic scenes they convey."
Edited by Janine Latham.

Graphic design: Neil Donnelly.
 
published in 2015
English edition
22,9 x 30 cm (softcover)
48 pages (17 color ill. & 15 b/w ill.)
 
18.00 9.00
(special offer)
 
ISBN : 978-0-9863230-5-8
EAN : 9780986323058
 
in stock
Early Work Early Work Early Work Early Work Early Work Early Work
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