In his fourth Berlin solo exhibition at the gallery of Michael Schultz, Swiss artist Andy Denzler shows a new overview of what has made his style of painting so well known: shattered figure representations, which largely elude the focused gaze since they are visually distorted.
Andy Denzler uses a significant and unmistakable alteration technique in his painting. He creates the sketchy layout of the painting with coarse brushstrokes, completely alla prima, and then subjects the canvas to a consistent surface treatment at the end of the actual painting process. Only by smudging the paint in mostly horizontal streaks, the actual motif is revealed. Even before the process of blurring, the artist plans the distortion and then the optical resurrection of the work in great detail.
As if in an optical time-lapse, the artist animates the surface with spatula and squeegee - thus creating movement and at the same time pauses our eyes as the picture stutters.
"I speed up and slow down the colors" says Denzler.
Denzler's painting traces the contradictions between appearance and reality, asks questions about truth and deception. He works with the image disturbances of the modern world and lets us feel with each view of his material-intensive, sensitive subjects that transmitters and receivers in today's WiFi worlds still need to have certain frequencies in common in order to understand each other.
Andy Denzler was born in Zurich in 1965, where he still lives and works today.
His works are represented in important collections, including the Denver Art Museum, the White Cube Collection in London, the White House in Washington DC, the Alison and Peter Klein Collection in Eberdingen-Nußdorf, the Museum Würth in Schwäbisch Hall, and most recently in the collection of the Kistefos Museum in Norway.