This week: Guest interviewer Anna Kunz (accompanied by Pamela
Fraser) talks to Carroll Dunham about his show at He Said/She Said
and more!
American painter. He completed a BA at Trinity College, Hartford,
CT, in 1971 and later settled in New York. Initially influenced by
Post-Minimalism, process art and conceptual art, he was soon
attracted to the tactility and allusions to the body in the work of
Brice Marden, Robert Mangold and Robert Ryman. Spurred on by the
revival of interest in Surrealism in the 1970s, Dunham began to
make abstract, biomorphic paintings reminiscent of the work of
Arshile Gorky and André Masson, executed with a comic twist
enhanced by lurid colours and the suggestion of contemporary
psychedelia. In the 1980s he began to paint on wood veneer and rose
to prominence in the context of a broader return to painting in the
period.
Age of
Rectangles (1983–5; New York, MOMA) is a highly abstract
composition of differing forms, symptomatic of his work at this
time: geometric sketches co-exist with eroticized organic shapes
while the forms of the wood veneer show through the surface of the
paint to suggest surging forces. Towards the end of the 1980s he
began to move towards single, dominating motifs; wave-like forms
were particularly common. In the
Integrated Paintings series
he applied paint-covered balls and chips to the surface of the
canvas
to further develop the sense of organic life.
Mound A (1991;
priv. col.) is typical of Dunham’s work of the early 1990s in which
his forms began to resemble mounds of live matter, covered in
orifices. Around 1993 his paintings began to feature schematic,
cartoon figures which suggest the influence of Philip Guston.