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Written by Administrator
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Katie van Scherpenberg’s work is an extended meditation on painting, landscape, time, matter, and femininity. The three works in the Blanton Museum’s collection exemplify the consistency of these issues in her practice, even as they represent media as diverse as photogravure, environmental installation, and painting. Despite this variety of media, van Scherpenberg’s work should be understood in terms of the specific demands and problems of painting, both as a physical act and as a historical construct. |
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Written by Katie van Scherpenberg
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Many artists have taken the fourteen stations of the cross as their starting point. However, the contemporary series to which I could refer more directly would be Barnett Newmann’s exhibit at the National Gallery, in Washington, D.C..This work was admirably describved by Nicolas Calas. He said, “At a time of crisis, no place is the right place; we get times and doubts into motion, we switch positions from left to right and go back again. From the moment we feel lost, we are in ecstasy and out of place in the Here, even though if still in the Now.” In Brazil, the most direct and most evident influence upon my work came from the time – seventeen years – I lived in Amapá, in the island of Santana, on the Amazon River. I believed many of my works as well as many of my concerns for painting refer to that period. |
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Written by Katie van Scherpenberg
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Born in S.Paulo, Brazil, in 1940, Katie is a painter, printmaker, draftswoman, teacher and lecturer. She studied painting with Caterina Baratelli from 1957 to 1960,sculpture with George Brenninger at the Academie der Bildende Kunst (Munich Federal University) from 1962 to 1964; and with Oscar Kokoschka at the “Schule der Sehens”in Salzburg, Austria, in 1963. |
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