Menu

John Currin

New Paintings

November 4–December 23, 2010
980 Madison Avenue, New York

Installation video Play Button

Installation video

Works Exhibited

John Currin, Constance Towers, 2009 Oil on canvas, 40 × 27 inches (101.6 × 68.6 cm)© John Currin

John Currin, Constance Towers, 2009

Oil on canvas, 40 × 27 inches (101.6 × 68.6 cm)
© John Currin

John Currin, The Women of Franklin Street, 2009 Oil on canvas, 88 × 68 inches (223.5 × 172.7 cm)© John Currin

John Currin, The Women of Franklin Street, 2009

Oil on canvas, 88 × 68 inches (223.5 × 172.7 cm)
© John Currin

John Currin, Mademoiselle, 2009 Oil on canvas, 42 × 34 inches (106.7 × 86.4 cm)© John Currin

John Currin, Mademoiselle, 2009

Oil on canvas, 42 × 34 inches (106.7 × 86.4 cm)
© John Currin

John Currin, Hot Pants, 2010 Oil on canvas, 78 × 60 inches (198.1 × 152.4 cm)© John Currin

John Currin, Hot Pants, 2010

Oil on canvas, 78 × 60 inches (198.1 × 152.4 cm)
© John Currin

John Currin, Big Hands, 2010 Oil on canvas, 40 × 28 inches (101.6 × 71.1 cm)© John Currin

John Currin, Big Hands, 2010

Oil on canvas, 40 × 28 inches (101.6 × 71.1 cm)
© John Currin

About

The people I paint don’t exist. The only thing that is real is the painting. It’s not like a photograph where there’s another reality that existed at a certain moment in time in the past. The image is only happening right now and this is the only version of it. To me, that’s fascinating. It’s an eternal moment.
John Currin

Gagosian is pleased to present new paintings by John Currin.

Currin’s depictions of the female figure enchant and repel, often in equal measure. Labeled as a mannerist, caricaturist, radical conservative, or satirist, Currin continues to confound expectations and evade categorization. While his meticulous and virtuosic technique is indebted to the history of classical painting, the images themselves engage startlingly contemporary ideas about the representation of the human figure. With inspirations as diverse as old master portraits, pinups, and mid-twentieth-century B movies, Currin continues to paint ideational yet challengingly perverse images of female subjects, from lusty nymphs to more ethereal feminine prototypes. With his uncanny ability to locate the point at which the beautiful and the grotesque are held in perfect balance, he continues to produce subversive portraits of idiosyncratic women in conventional settings. The latest additions to his cast include the demure Constance Towers and the extravagant Mademoiselle, presented here alongside scenes of bourgeois erotic abandon, such as The Women of Franklin Street.

A fully illustrated catalogue is forthcoming, featuring an interview with the artist by Angus Cook and short fiction essays by Wells Tower.