10/8/08 - 1/11/09
Third and Fourth Floor
Live Forever: Elizabeth Peyton
"Live Forever: Elizabeth Peyton" is the first survey of Elizabeth Peyton's work in an American institution. The survey will include more than 100 works made over the past fifteen years.
Peyton's oeuvre can be read in chapters, each of which feature portraits of friends, family, personal heroes, and fleeting passions. "Live Forever: Elizabeth Peyton" will offer a visual biography of the artist, and at the same time create a snapshot of the popular culture of the past decade.
From her earliest portraits of musicians like Kurt Cobain, Liam Gallagher, and Jarvis Cocker to more recent paintings featuring friends and figures from the worlds of art, fashion, cinema, and politics including Rirkrit Tiravanija, Matthew Barney, and Marc Jacobs, Elizabeth Peyton's body of work presents a chronicle of America at the end of the last century. A painter of modern life, Peyton's small, jewel-like portraits are also intensely empathetic, intimate, and even personal. Together, her works capture an artistic zeitgeist that reflects the cultural climate of the late-twentieth and early-twenty-first centuries.
Peyton emerged as a vanguard voice in the return to narrative figuration in contemporary painting in the 1990s, and is among a small group of artists to develop a peculiar hybrid of realism and conceptualism. Although her paintings reference nineteenth-century modernist painting - from Eduard Manet to John Singer Sargent - Peyton processes these masters through an intimate understanding of twentieth-century artists such as David Hockney, Alex Katz, and above all, Andy Warhol. Like Warhol, Peyton's art is at the service of the culture it captures. A brilliant colorist with a razor-sharp graphic sense, her paintings are enormously seductive in form and content, celebrating the aesthetics of youth, fame, and creative genius. They are also testaments to Peyton's deeper passion for beauty in all its forms - from the elevated to the everyday. Ultimately, Peyton's paintings are evidence of a dedication to the creation of a new kind of popular art. Steeped in history, her work aspires to bridge the gap between art and life.
"Live Forever: Elizabeth Peyton" premieres at the New Museum and will then travel to the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis; the Whitechapel Art Gallery in London; and the Bonnefantenmuseum, in Maastricht , The Netherlands. The exhibition will be accompanied by a comprehensive catalogue co-published by the New Museum and Phaidon, Ltd. Designed by the award-winning Graphic Thought Facility, it will feature essays by Iwona Blazwick, critic, curator and director of the Whitechapel Art Gallery in London; New York poet John Giorno; and Laura Hoptman, Kraus Family Senior Curator at the New Museum. The book will also include a large section of artworks, photographs, and ephemera organized by Peyton. Support for the accompanying publication is provided by the J. McSweeney and G. Mills Publications Fund at the New Museum.
The exhibition is organized by Laura Hoptman, Kraus Family Senior Curator at the New Museum.
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Dallas, TX (January 1978)
1994
Oil on board
20 x 16 in
(50.8 x 40.6 cm)
Private collection. Courtesy Sadie Coles HQ, London
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Earl’s Court
1996
Oil on board
10 x 8 in
(25.4 x 20.3 cm)
Collection Nina and Frank Moore, New York
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Ben Drawing
2001
Oil on board
10 1/8 x 8 1/4 in
(25.7 x 21 cm)
Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh; A.W. Mellon Acquisition Endowment, 2001
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Georgia O’Keeffe (after Stieglitz 1917)
2006
Watercolor on paper
14 1/4 x 10 1/4 in
(36.2 x 26 cm)
Collection James-Keith (JK) Brown and Eric G. Diefenbach
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NYC 2008 (West 11th Street, Greenwich Street, and 7th Avenue)
2008
Oil on board
9 x 6 in
(22.9 x 15.2 cm)
Collection Warren and Mitzi Eisenberg
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Elizabeth Peyton
Elizabeth Peyton was born in Connecticut in 1965. She received her BFA from the School of Visual Arts, New York in 1987. She lives and works in New York. Peyton’s work has been exhibited worldwide and is represented in the collections of the Musée national d’art moderne, Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris; the Kunstmuseum, Wolfsburg; the Museum fur Gegenwartskunst, Basel; the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; the Museum of Modern Art, New York; the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; the Seattle Art Museum; the Walker Art Center, Minneapolis; and the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, among many others.




