Civic Center, San Francisco, Estados Unidos (Civic Center) - Wayne Thiebaud
San Francisco - Estados Unidos
Coleção privada
OST - 121x91 - 1986
Wayne
Thiebaud’s radiant and expansive Civic Center depicts lived
experience at the precipice between mimetic representation and abstraction,
culminating in a vision both novel in its originality and familiar in its
nostalgia. The present work is dually real and surreal, bringing together
disparate visual strategies, viewpoints, and illustrative styles into a unified
composition. Underscoring Thiebaud’s position as the preeminent chronicler of
Postwar American culture in painting, Civic Center is a comprehensive
synthesis of perception and imagination, enduring as both an authoritative
record of the artist’s singular vision, and a summation of a communal social
fabric and zeitgeist.
Wayne
Thiebaud’s artistic practice is deeply tied to the state of California, its
culture and people. The artist first rendered the urban landscape of San
Francisco after buying a home in the city in 1973, but his interest in the
idiosyncrasies of the urban terrain finds its origin in the most formative and
foundational experiences of his youth. Describing an early memory, the artist
states: "[w]hen I was about 8 years old, [my uncle] gave me a little toy
bulldozer and scraper and cars, and invited me to go and make this little world
out in the backyard. And, for some reason or other, it was a very intriguing
and memorable thing to do. I had this earth place where I could make roads,
tunnels, little buildings, and trees and make my own world and I've remained
interested in the city as a human enterprise, and the pile of human tracks it
contains and the byways of living and moving" (the artist in conversation
with Richard Wollheim, Wayne Thiebaud: Cityscapes, San Francisco 1993,
n.p.). This whimsical spirit of play, fostered by Thiebaud’s childhood
experiences crafting miniature cities of his own, is combined with a virtuosic
painterly control in the present work. Civic Center is dominated by
angular thrusts and intersecting lines. The intricately constructed composition
of the present work is resplendent with steep hillsides, swelling skyscrapers,
winding paths and wide boulevards. Angular shadows cast by buildings in the
raking light of dusk bisect the sharp diagonal of the pavement, overlaying the
organic wave of the road cutting its way through the park at the center. As a
site of formal investigation, Civic Center subverts the standard
illusionistic toolset, skewing the scale of objects in their relation to the
landscape and each other with a sharp clarity of line and vision. More than a
generalized dreamworld, the present work is rife with distinct and highly
detailed architectural features, and one can sense Thiebaud’s technical
ingenuity as well as his clear sense of wonder and discovery in rendering the
landscape.
While works
like Civic Center are intrinsically tied to the lived experience of
the unique geography of San Francisco, with its steep inclines and sweeping
vistas, the impossible angles and spatial distortions of the present work are
only made possible by compositing multiple viewpoints and synthesizing them into
a single composition. Describing the genesis of the series to which the present
work belongs, Thiebaud explains: “I’ve always painted out-of-doors, with a
French easel, some in the city, but not very much. So I started from the San
Francisco intersection […] After painting directly on the street, and making 20
or 30 pictures that way, I felt none of them were very successful. The reason
for not feeling that they were delivering on what I had hope for had to do with
some sort of dramatic feeling in this peculiar San Francisco landscape […] I
went back to the studio, and began to make a lot drawings with graphite or
charcoal on paper, which I could move around a lot, to offer more the kind of
visual and physical feeling that was closer to the idea of San Francisco. So,
when I returned to the painting again, the city itself looked more like the
composite drawings I had been making. And that dialogue between what was
actually there and what was made up became the basis of the entire series” (ibid).
By combining multiple viewpoints in one, both real and imagined, Thiebaud
channels the inroads of early Modernism, referring to Picasso, Braque and Léger
and their achievements in Cubism, as well as the angular and faceted
topographical approach of artists more contemporary to his practice, such as
Richard Diebenkorn and Edward Hopper. Two-dimensional space and
three-dimensional space are made synonymous in Civic Center, with depth,
distance, light and shadow flattened into a mosaic-like framework, arranged by
the artist for emotional effect.
While form is
integral to the conceptual structure of Civic Center, color also
takes on an expanded role in Thiebaud’s artistic world. Famous for his bold use
of vibrant, often clashing colors to depict mundane objects and scenes, the
artist uses color as an important compositional tool in the present work.
Thiebaud utilizes a kaleidoscopic palette, running through the full spectrum to
create a scene which exudes the clinging warmth of sunset at the end of a
summer’s day. Bathed in the glow of the disappearing sun, the quality of light
in Civic Center has calming emotional resonances, which act as a
salve to the disjunctive visual juxtapositions Thiebaud crafts in the
complicated architectural setting. Describing the relationship between the
artist’s purely formal and chromatic strategies in his cityscapes, Steven Nash
states: “[w]hen Thiebaud wants to stretch for a big effect, he has no
trouble with drama, expansiveness, or even a kind of sublimity [...] Steep
precipices that overwhelm human presence and excite a sense of terribilita,
danger, or fear are common [...] Integral with the grandeur of nature, or
nature transformed by man, is the power of natural light to illuminate, even
dazzle and inspire [...] The light is more than a matter of energy and science.
It is an embodiment of emotion. For Thiebaud it surely is not religious or
symbolic in a conventional sense, but is nevertheless celebratory and life
affirming" (Steven Nash, "Thiebaud's Many Realisms" in: Wayne
Thiebaud, Seventy Years of Painting, Palm Springs 2007, pp. 19-20).
In Civic Center, color and shape inform each other, bringing the viewer on
an emotional journey inspired by a wonder rooted at the intersection of lived
experience and the limitless potential inherent to imagination.
Despite its
variegated and layered urban composition—an inherently active subject matter—Civic
Center has a remarkable stillness and calm. A single trolley in the
foreground is the most obvious sign of life, but all other evidence of the
activity of San Francisco at the end of the work day is washed away, with the
scene frozen into a serene vignette. While Thiebaud’s mastery over the
abstraction of space is evident in the warped geometries and exaggerated
topographical proportions of Civic Center, the abstraction of time is
intrinsic to the work’s evocative powers. Describing this effect, the artist
states: “[t]here are two things.
One is something to do with empathy, and
drama, and the way it gives you different kinds of caricature, space caricature
or color caricature, or even where you push things further than a single
projective system might let you. And in this way you are helped to get the
feeling of things, the way things physically feel” (the artist in conversation
with Richard Wollheim, Wayne Thiebaud: Cityscapes, San Francisco 1993,
n.p.). Real and imagined, frenetic and serene, Civic Center has this
“feeling,” occupying the space between perception and emotional experience.
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