Open: Tue-Sat 11am-6pm

Karl-Marx-Allee 45, D-10178, Berlin, Germany
Open: Tue-Sat 11am-6pm


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Malcolm Morley: Sensations

Capitain Petzel, Berlin

Fri 28 Apr 2023 to Sat 10 Jun 2023

Karl-Marx-Allee 45, D-10178 Malcolm Morley: Sensations

Tue-Sat 11am-6pm

Artist: Malcolm Morley

Opening reception: Friday 28 April, 6pm

Curated by Michael Short in close collaboration with the Estate of Malcolm Morley, the exhibition includes loans by private collections, and will be accompanied by a publication surveying the artist’s work.


Artworks

Malcolm Morley, Lifeguard, 1988

Oil and wax on canvas

204 × 280 cm

© The Estate of Malcolm Morley. Courtesy Wendy Gondeln. Ph: Jens Ziehe

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Malcolm Morley, Piazza d'Italia with French Knights, 2017

Oil on linen

142.2 × 182.9 cm

© The Estate of Malcolm Morley

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Malcolm Morley, Airlock, 2014

Oil on linen

127 × 101.6 cm

© The Estate of Malcolm Morley

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Installation Views

Installation image for Malcolm Morley: Sensations, at Capitain Petzel Installation image for Malcolm Morley: Sensations, at Capitain Petzel Installation image for Malcolm Morley: Sensations, at Capitain Petzel

And so seeing work from a long time period together is pleasurable because not only do you see the diversity, you also see some fidelity…Things change, but they are still true to something. And with that you‘ve got it. Diversity and fidelity. – Malcolm Morley

The fundamental aspect, the motor that drove Malcolm‘s passion for painting, was sensation. Sensation being the unmediated bodily response to the outside world through the senses; in this case, the sense of sight. Malcolm admired the art of Van Gogh, Cézanne and Picasso, artists whom he felt were more concerned with presenting the world as something made with paint, to create a new visual experience, rather than being concerned with what the subject matter was ‘about’. Malcolm said he wanted to get the painting directly into the nervous system:

...the emphasis is very much on the idea of looking at. I paint them from the way in which I’m looking at them, which is really from the point of view of sensations. I feel the sensation of it, and pre-imagine it made of paint. ...So it’s not just a question of looking, but of doing, in relation to this, in relation to that, in relation to the space between things. In a way, it’s very classical.

As seen from a 60-year perspective, it seems that any material could be a potential painting for him; the range is overwhelming. But not everything was a final candidate for his painted world the images he chose were personal and idiosyncratic. Cézanne had his apples, Malcolm had his ships and airplanes from his childhood during WWII. These images were something that engaged Malcolm’s attention, as an affectionately-remembered association or attraction, and then as a rigorous collaborator that held up to his prolonged scrutiny during the diligent painting process.

The grid he used to format and scale up the images ensured that every square centimeter of the canvas received his focused attention, heightening the experience so that the finished painting represented his initial sensation with the same concentration. Each square was treated as a small abstract painting of its own, taken all together they make one unified area. Unity in diversity, diversity in unity.

Looking over the course of his oeuvre, one sees he had invented many styles of painting, from Photorealism, Neo-Expressionism, his own brand of Surrealism, and beyond, using a vast assortment of images (postcard images, cruise ships, advertising, beach scenes, airplanes, sports figures, motocross racers, knights, castles, etc.), always primarily committed to the sensation of seeing. The paintings are akin to the intense encounter a child has when experiencing the outside world for the first time. When the unknown, the unseen, or the overlooked makes its appearance. Malcolm lived and painted the seeming paradox of manifesting one’s innocence through a lifetime of experience.

– Michael Short

Installation view, Malcolm Morley, Malcolm Morley: Sensations, Capitain Petzel, Berlin, 2023. Ph: Gunter Lepkowski

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