Kenny
Schachter/ROVE @ 132 Perry Street
March 10th — April 6th
Kenny
Schachter ROVE is pleased to present a selection of recent works by
Kenny Scharf.
Fame came to Scharf in the crazy 80s, and in the last ten years he has
had over 25 solo shows. Now living in Los Angeles, he’s still
brewing his peculiar brew of Pop Surrealism; in his own words, “reaching
out beyond the elitist boundaries of fine art and connect to popular
culture” through his art. However, the connection between pop
culture and fine art is not confined to the art that ends up on gallery
walls. Through his various public works, private commissions, cartoons,
advertisements, and merchandise, he has been able to bridge the high
and the low quite dexterously, with social awareness, artistic ability,
idiosyncratic imagery, and above all else, a kooky sense of humor.
On
view are two series of large-scale paintings, ranging in size from 30
x 40 inches to 8 x 8 feet, all executed in oil on canvas.
One
series features large, shiny, colored, globular blobs floating on black
or white backgrounds. Synesthesia reigns in Scharf’s wacky world,
with titles like Blubble, Glubblobz, Lavup, and Splooge.
It seems Scharf not only exhibits the anti-elitist aesthetic of Léger,
but his technique recalls that of the so-called “Cubist Charlie
Chaplin,” with forms seemingly airbrushed–as opposed to
hair brushed–on the canvas.
The
other series of paintings show signs of the Scharf we’re more
familiar with, with his signature bubble-headed creatures, worms, and
loony-balloon characters, melding, mixing, and vying for space in the
claustrophilic, compactly composed canvases. Scharf’s palate,
ranging from pale yellow to magenta, is as expansive as the cornucopia
of wild creatures populating the paintings.
In
a way, these recent works hark back to an even more primal pop universe
than the starry, sci-fi paintings from earlier in the artist’s
career. Whether they’re pure, Lava Lamp-like colored forms or
playful, protean, smiling species, the constituents of Scharf’s
cosmos seem caught colliding and commingling near the beginning of time
and space, and there’s definitely some big-banging going on.
—Benjamin
Berlow