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Friedrich Kunath

April 17, 2010 - October 14, 2010

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ABOUT THE EXHIBITION

Like a favorite poem, Friedrich Kunath's works poignantly yet playfully distill the fundamentals of human emotion–desire, loneliness, and anxiety–creating comically tragic scenes in which human beings try to find their way in the world. Employing an impressive range of mediums–drawing, painting, sculpture, installation, photography, and a neon sign–Kunath will cover the lobby walls, creating a world both fantastical and quotidian revolving around a number of middle aged male characters struggling to define their lives in a sea of uncertainty.

ESSAY

We Are All in This Alone
By Anne Ellegood

The middle-aged male protagonist who questions how his life has unfolded and ponders the ways in which he might fulfill unmet desires or control his destiny is commonly found on the printed page, in television dramas and sitcoms, and on celluloid. Think of Willy Loman's desperately paradoxical attempts to cling to his loathsome work as a salesman and to imagine a different life for his family in Arthur Miller's Death of a Salesman. Consider Alexander Portnoy, of Philip Roth's Portnoy's Complaint, and his struggles to understand his simultaneous longing for the steadiness of family, religion, and history and propensity for disillusionment and rejection. Remember the seething rage of the injured Brick in Tennessee Williams’s Cat on a Hot Tin Roof? Or the confused contempt that prompts Lester Burnham to take up weight lifting in his garage as he lusts for his daughter’s best friend in American Beauty? Picture Bob Harris trudging around his hotel in Lost in Translation, weighed down by regret and failure. And laugh at Seinfeld’s George Costanza and his perpetual attempts to find the missing pieces of professional and personal satisfaction in the puzzle of his life.

Male figures—often alone, gazes downcast, briefcases in hand, clouds overhead, amid the chaos of nature or tethered to their desks—are the centerpiece of Friedrich Kunath’s installation in the Hammer Museum’s lobby stairwell. The artist has transformed the space into a sort of private men’s club with walls covered in pin-striped and plaid gabardine and corduroy fabrics and densely hung with paintings portraying middle-aged men in various states of turmoil or transition. While the array of individuals on view may bring to mind the walls of portraits found in the Harvard Club or other exclusive settings indicative of social status, Kunath’s depictions are not portraits per se, and they do not follow any typical painterly style aimed at the faithful representation of a subject. Rather, these canvases depict the “everyman” found everywhere in our society, rendered in a variety of drawing styles atop layers of colorful watercolor washes and dark clouds of ink, occasionally accompanied by a handwritten text. Painted in simple, illustrative black outline or in silhouette, sometimes silk-screened onto the canvas, Kunath’s men are more type than specific persona, and yet they are profoundly familiar to us. Despite their nature as caricatures and the humor of their cartoony expressions of emotion, these characters conjure embattled feelings of sympathy (and its complicated cousin, empathy), sadness, ennui, resentment, and disdain, prompting us to see beyond their mere outlines and to consider our reactions to them seriously. For however bloated and ubiquitous the stereotypes of the “midlife crisis” may be in our culture,1 there is a truthfulness to the search for meaning that inevitably accompanies each individual life’s journey. And it is this search—this looking upward, this scratching of the head, this trudging forward through a chaotic landscape, this climbing stairs into the unknown—that Kunath features again and again in his work. More

 

Organized by Anne Ellegood, Hammer senior curator.