My understanding of what the term “Contemporary Painting” entails
Unlike the desperate search for
novelty and originality that was the currency of the past century, painters
nowadays do not need to search for novel techniques or styles. There are
hundreds of new and creative painting techniques available online and artists
who make use of them will probably not become the important names of this
generation. simply because we are now over
this need. This attitude does not correspond to the spirit of our time. We, as
painters, can choose whether we want to make use of new techniques or not, but
that should not be the goal of our work if we intend to be part of the
contemporary dialogue.
A couple of years ago I wrote
a text titled “Dense atemporality” – which I now revisit - in which I dealt
with my understanding of what is implied or is expected to be present when one
refers to “Contemporary Painting.”
The 20th Century
changed drastically our perception of ourselves in the world in many spheres of
knowledge, with the advents of the theory of relativity, Freud’s findings about
the subconscious, and Picasso’s perceptions in art, just to name a few. However,
towards the end of that century, another major change took place, and it would
have a strong impact on the world we live in now.
From the 80s on, personal computers
became a common tool in our society. Never before had we had so much of global human
history at our fingertips with such ease. My generation grew up in the world of
the Encyclopedia, where we cherished the idea that there was a limited
knowledge about the world, and that this knowledge could be contained in a
series of books, which could be obtained by the reader. The Encyclopedia fed
our hopes to know everything that there was to know about anything. The
creation of the personal computers shattered that idea in pieces. The sheer amount
of information stored in a computer HD is enormous, and I don’t believe anybody
has the slightest hope to acquire it all. There is always far more information
than we can learn or cope with. We can only have access to a tiny share of what
is available to us.
And with this, we suddenly found
ourselves overwhelmed by how much information we had created and how much we had
discovered. We began to realize that we have so much on our plates we are
simply unable to process it all, as some pieces will always be left behind. The
awareness that there is always more than what we can grasp is what
characterizes the Zeitgeist, the spirit of the moment.
When I think of contemporary
art, in general terms, I think of an art that is taking this realization under
consideration. And when I think about contemporary painting particularly, I imagine
painters who have the whole history of painting at their fingertips, and are
widely aware of it.
What is key to the moment is
that, whatever we decide to do, we have a lot to digest in the process. Past
and present are equally available to us and this is the first time we
experience this in the recent Western history. That is why we live in an atemporary
time, that is dense with surplus of information.
Really interesting!
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