daniel rich
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daniel rich
Daniel Rich
Daniel Rich (German, 1977), 601 Lexington Ave, 2022. Acrylic on dibond, 80 x 50 in.
Daniel Rich at Miles McEnery Gallery
The paintings above are from Daniel Rich’s 2020 exhibition at Miles McEnery Gallery in NYC.
From the gallery’s press release-
Daniel Rich’s reticulated cityscapes and slick façades appear at first glance to be quite literally superficial. Whether it is a geometric exterior pressed close to the picture plane or a cluster of multiple structures glimpsed from a distance, we experience architecture in his painting as a wholly exteriorized phenomenon— looming close up or made smaller through a bird’s-eye view.
His process-oriented paintings offer windows to different parts of the world— some figuratively, others much more literally—and can evoke a distorted experience of temporality for the viewer. Like compositions by Bernd and Hilla Becher or Andreas Gursky, Rich’s artworks offer clinical, complex architectural views onto the world that are filled with subtleties. However, Rich differs from Becher or Gursky in his painstaking, intricate process of translating found images into painting. The works also evoke early 20th century European Modernism, recalling Giorgio de Chirico’s metaphysical cityscapes and Germany’s Neue Sachlichkeit (New Objectivity) artists of the 1920s and 1930s.
Architecture, as it is commonly understood, is designed and implemented to house the human and is itself the manifestation of our constructed realities. When all signs of life are missing from buildings and spaces, as in Rich’s paintings, the result is an unsettling subversion that upends and questions what we have come to expect of both architectural spaces and the organized linearity of time. Rich probes viewers to consider what lies beyond the surface.
Rich also uses his anonymous architectural imagery to talk about history and politics. He speaks of his scenes as “failed utopias” and “changing political power structures.” In their seeming permanence, the fixed and rigid edifices that populate his work speak to a late capitalist urbanism that sees its monuments not as contingent, but as immovable and eternal.
His newest paintings are currently on view at the gallery for his exhibition Flat Earth on view until 1/28/23.
Druzbha Hotel, Crimea - Daniel Rich, 2015.
German, b. 1977-
Acrylic on dibond, 32 x 34 cm.
Daniel Rich, Stadium, 2012.
Acrylic on dibond paper, 205.7 x 149.9 cm.
Daniel Rich, A ‘04 Back to the Future Miles McEnery Gallery 520 West 21st, New York, NY September 10 - October 10