Q & A Julian Schnabel.
Julian Schnabel: It’s from an image I found at the Fish Farm in Napeague taped up on their refrigerator.
BP: Two other paintings are cropped landscapes with flowers. Does working outside have a direct impact on the imagery?
JS: Well, I can turn around, and I’m confronted by nature. You see all the holes between the branches and the way the light hits the leaves. You realize it’s not just one green. It’s a million different versions of green and the organized chaos of nature.
BP: To me, your new flower paintings hover between the feeling of a Japanese garden and Monet’s water lilies.
JS: These flowers are in the graveyard where van Gogh is buried. The black and white marks are from the wall behind it, the little stones. You don’t see the sky, which is interesting, just the roses inside this enclosed space.
BP: Does that convey a sense of entrapment?
JS: I wouldn’t call it claustrophobia, but they are relentless in a way where there’s no escape.
BP: When you visit van Gogh’s grave, do you get a spirit hit from that proximity?
JS: I’ve been thinking about making a movie about van Gogh. I’ve got about sixty pages. I’m working with Jean-Claude Carrière. I think it’s interesting to see what van Gogh was thinking about. He would go into a museum and act as if no one else was there. He’d walk right up to a painting and block other people’s view. He didn’t care.
BP: Paintings by which artists?
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A Portrait of the Artist as a Collector
How much can artworks tell us about the person who acquired them?
You've Gotta See This!
Artists are luring their peers and predecessors out of obscurity and back into the spotlight–discovering, rediscovering, and even mentoring them.
Concrete History
Chicana Muralist Judith F. Baca goes from the great wall to the museum wall.
Clean, Well-Lighted Places
On our nostalgia for the golden age of art dealing
Q & A Douglas Crimp
Q & A Douglas Crimp.
Mom & Popped
In a market contraction, the middle class gallery is getting squeezed.
Mary Heilmann’s Idiosyncratic, Rhymthic Abstractions Find Their Place In the Sun
Mary Heilmann’s idiosyncratic, rhymthic abstractions—and chairs—find their place in the sun.
To All Tomorrow's Parties
Break out the bubbly—Florine Stettheimer’s back.
From Palace To Tank
“Karaoke King” and art collector Qiao Zhibing is parlaying his popular Shanghai karaoke-club cum-exhibition-space into a museum-cum-recreation-space.
Autocorrect
The Politics of Museum Collection Re-Hangs