Clay Ketter

New Paintings

American artist Clay Ketter has chosen the Impasse Beaubourg of Galerie Templon to exhibit a new series of abstract works that fall somewhere between paintings and readymades. This new work is inspired by the devastated landscape of New Orleans in the wake of Hurricane Katrina. Despite the subject matter, these “pictures” and painted photographs do not conjure up a sense of desolation, but seek to communicate a vital energy that is almost musical.

Clay Ketter has been developing an original body of work since the 1990s, his paintings inhabiting the frontier between minimalism and architecture. His work explores the strange beauty of construction and demolition sites. The artist uses a combination of paint, photography and building materials to invent abstract surfaces with unexpected textures a blend of stucco, plaster and wood.

This new exhibition is rooted in Clay Ketter’s 2007 project, Gulf Coastal Slabs, a set of photographs documenting the effects of Hurricane Katrina.

 

He spent many months on top of a crane taking photographs of the traces of foundations left by houses swept away by the hurricane. Similar to the work he produced in the Spanish city of Valencia in 2003, this project significantly enriched his vocabulary as a painter.

The new works bring to mind aerial views of urban building sites or dismantled interiors with traces of shelves and wallpaper. And yet the artist succeeds in liberating himself from this bleak reality, finding the freedom to create dancing compositions, which tends towards the physionomical. As he explains, “My paintings are projections of energy into the room’s space (…) I also find that many of my compositions resemble, even if ever so slightly, the composition of the human face. This comes about subconsciously. These works are self-determined, visually associative and the process of painting them can be described as hallucinatory.” Minimalist painter and carpenter, Clay Ketter is also a musician; he is aware that music, particularly rock music, probably has a deep-reaching influence on his approach to energy and the visual rhythm of his artwork.

The artist

 
Clay Ketter was born in 1961 in the USA and has been living in Sweden for over 20 years. He made a name for himself in the 1990s with his hybrid works using painting, building materials and photography. His work follows in the American abstract painting tradition as shaped by artists from Jackson Pollock to Robert Ryman. Ketter’s abstract surfaces, with their unexpected textures and a strange flatness, probe the strange beauty of building and demolition sites.

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