Sue Williams, Sun Conure, 2002
In all the phases of her painting, the American painter Sue Williams has remained
true to one principle. While she professes dissolving form in abstraction, she
simultaneously allows a corporeality to emerge through the gestural brush strokes
against a monochrome background. The exhibition in the Secession assembles works
from the last ten years, making it possible to trace the painterly development
in Sue William's work.
Sue Williams, Art for the Institution and the Home, Installation
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In the feminist discussion of the 80s, painting did not really feature as a terrain
for women. Painting was dealt with as the patriarchal domain par excellence, and
the criteria for judging painting were in fact so strongly subjected to male power
of definition that many women found it better, or even strategically more clever,
to work in fields that were still considered largely unoccupied at that time (photography,
video, performance). Sue Williams made use of painting right from the beginning.
Ultimately by carrying feminist issues into painting as well, she insisted on
painting as a métier not inherently suitable for women.
Sue Williams, Art for the Institution and the Home, Installation
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The early pictures, created in the mid-90s, have an affinity with the genre of
trivial picture stories - comics and caricatures. With undisguised rage, they
show scenes of violence, sexual transgressions and abuse against women and children
as a kind of labyrinth of all obscenities. Whereas the motifs by themselves frequently
do not clarify to what extent the scenes of domestic violence are merely traced
and sarcastically left on display, in combination with fragmentary sentences and
commentaries, they unequivocally bear witness to commitment.
Sue Williams, Art for the Institution and the Home, Installation
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In the beginning, Sue Williams explicitly named her themes, undoubtedly also to
find a clarity in her formulations herself. Over the course of her artistic praxis,
in which her contents are now named with equal explicitness, her interest shifted
more to the gesture of painting, brush stroke and color. In the late 90s, the
depicting moment in Williams' work gave way to an increasingly growing abstraction,
although she retained the rhythm and movement of her earlier paintings. The works
created now no longer contain any conceptual information to explain themselves.
Sue Williams, Art for the Institution and the Home, Installation
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Since Williams has taken the words out of her visual vocabulary, she concentrates
her attention exclusively on the contents of painting technique. In comparison
with the earlier comic strip-like works, now it is the expressive, colored brush
stroke that becomes an object against the empty background. Her new paintings
are dominated by forceful lines, broken by an allusion to human anatomy, often
in neon colors, sometimes using no more than three or four colors. In their vulgarity,
the sometimes phallus-shaped lines are not only in contrast with the sublime that
was sought by representatives of abstract expressionism, for example, but also
subject the patriarchal power structures that traditionally dominate abstract
painting to an ironical treatment with a high painterly quality at the same time.
Sue Williams, Art for the Institution and the Home, Installation
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The title For the institution and the home refers on the one hand to the balancing
act between job and housework that many women still have to perform, but on the
other hand, the title also formulates the reproach that painting is often confronted
with, that it is namely no more than a decorative gesture. The extent to which
Sue Williams assumes a critical position with the title, remains hanging in the
balance.
Sue Williams, Art for the Institution and the Home, Installation
View
The exhibition is organized in cooperation between the Secession and the Institut
Valencià d'Art Modern (IVAM). After the Secession, the exhibition will
travel to Valencià.
Sue Williams, Art for the Institution and the Home, Installation
View
PUBLICATION
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SUE WILLIAMS
104 pages, 67 colored illustrations
authors: Matthias Herrmann, Kosme de Baranano Letamendia, Dan Cameron, Juan Carlos
Román
Secession, IVAM 2002, ISBN 3-88375-658-X
Distribution: Verlag der Buchhandlung Walther König
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available in the
shop |
SUE WILLIAMS, born in 1954 in Chicago Heights, Illinois; lives
and works in New York.
Solo exhibitions (selection): 2002 Galerie Hauser & Wirth & Presenhuber,
Zurich; Palm Beach Institute of Contemporary Art, Lake Worth, Florida; 303 Gallery,
New York; 2001 Gallery Side 2, Tokyo; Bernier/Eliades, Athens; 1998 Neue Galerie
und Landesmuseum Joanneum, Graz; 1997 Centre d'Art Contemporain, Geneva; 1996
Regen Projects, Los Angeles; Group exhibitions (selection): 2001 Brooklyn! Palm
Beach Institute of Contemporary Art, Lake Worth, Florida; Collaboration with Parkett
: 1984 to NOW, Museum of Modern Art, New York; 2000 Open Ends, Museum of Modern
Art, New York; Palais De Beaux-Arts de Bruxelles, Brussels; 1999 The American
Century: Art & Culture 1900-2000, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York;
Negotiating Small Truths, The Jack S. Blanton Museum of Art, Texas; 1998 Kunsthalle
Krems; Skulptur Figur Weiblich, Landesgalerie Oberösterreich, Linz; Pop surrealism,
The Aldrich Museum of Contemporary Art, Ridgefield; 1997 Biennale Exhibition,
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; Birth of the Cool, Deichtorhallen, Hamburg;
Kunsthaus Zürich; 1996 Ideal Standard Life, Spiral Wacoal Art Center, Tokyo
All Photos: Matthias Herrmann
For further information and photographic material please contact:
Tamara Schwarzmayr
Secession, Association of Visual Artists Vienna Secession
Friedrichstraße 12, 1010 Vienna
Tel: +43-1-5875307-21, Fax: +43-1-5875307-34
presse@secession.at