Tuesday, June 25, 2024

New Painting - "Pink Chair," 2022-2024 36x24 inches

 

Pink Chair (Race Point), 2024, 36x24 inches, oil on canvas. © 2024 Mitchell Johnson. 

I’ve been interested in the beach for as long as I can remember. It took a while to realize that what was intriguing me is the way man-made color separates from the backdrop of sky, water and sand. Even without the strong light of a sunny day, the dreamy space at the beach is unlike any other. Perhaps that’s what calls so many people to the seaside.

 

When I include umbrellas, towels or chairs in a composition, I’m turning them into paintings, I'm using them to talk about painterly space. As Deborah Butterfield put it so well on the occasion of her new exhibit of sculptures: "P.S. these are not horses".

 

P.S. these are not beach chairs.

 

As much as a painting might begin referencing a chair right in front of me, or a photo I carefully arranged, the chairs in the paintings never really exist. The Pink Chair in this post was in fact a blue chair I saw on Cape Cod and was able to draw and paint from life. Then in the studio, the color of the stripes kept changing until the stripes were completely covered and painted dull pink. The dull pink chair sat around the studio for months, sometimes it was turned to the wall, sometimes it was staring at me from across the room. Finally while mixing an orange for a new painting, a voice in my head sent me to get the painting and quickly I reworked the stripes finally achieving the right combination of clarity and surprise in the colors.


In 2012, the writer Chris Busa, described this process in an article for Provincetown Arts:

“If many of Johnson’s paintings are titled after the places that inspired them, no such places actually exist. Each one is a collage of compressed intimacies spread out over the months it takes to paint them. He has done what Edwin Dickinson called “Premier Coup”, in which a painting is completed outdoors in one blow. Yet his typical practice is to hold a painting for several months, or more, in the studio, to see if a painting stands the test of repeated looking, often involving the process of memory revision, where a succession of impressions gained over weeks or months is expressed as continuous flow.”

 

 

Mitchell Johnson Five Chairs (Race Point) painting on the back cover of July 1, 2024 New Yorker Magazine

 


Monday, May 20, 2024

Watch Isabelle Drezen interview Mitchell Johnson on BFM Cote d'Azur Television

 



On the occassion of the museum retrospective, La revelation de Meyreuil, Mitchell Johnson appeared on live TV in Nice, France May 16, 2024.


Watch the BFM interview here.

Monaco Matin writes about the Mitchell Johnson Museum Retrospective at Villa Les Camilias in Cap d'Ail, France

 

Monaco Matin, May 14, 2024


La Villa Les Camélias va se parer le temps d'une exposition, des œuvres du peintre américain Mitchell Johnson du 17 mai au 29 septembre. Le musée intègre cette exposition dans le cadre des célébrations de son dixième anniversaire.


Une évolution à travers le monde


Reconnu à l'international, l'artiste de 60 ans a voyagé dans plusieurs pays pour s'inspirer en plus d'approfondir et complexifier son travail. Ses œuvres font partie de 30 collections permanentes de musées à travers la planète.

Originaire de New York, le peintre s'est tourné vers la Californie pour perfectionner ses techniques auprès d'un des pionniers de l'art non-figuratif, Sam Francis, et au sein de la Parsons School of Design.

C'est à l'occasion de ses voyages en Europe que Mitchell Johnson a le plus étoffé son style. Les paysages qu'il a découverts, de la Suède à l'Italie, en passant par la France notamment, l'ont inspiré pour forger sa personnalité artistique.


Meyreuil, un déclic artistique


Mais c'est une petite commune proche d'Aix-en-Provence, Meyreuil, qui retient l'attention du peintre en 1989, faisant évoluer son œuvre au fil de ses passages répétés. L'exposition emprunte d'ailleurs le nom de la ville : La révélation de Meyreuil.


Elle réunira 40 œuvres de Mitchell Johnson retraçant 35 ans de carrière. Celle d'un « post-moderniste », selon le critique d'art américain Donald Kuspit dans un article du magazine spécialisé Hyperallergic en janvier dernier.


Westmont Ridley-Tree Museum of Art in Santa Barbara acquires a Mitchell Johnson painting

 

"Not Santa Barbara," 2017 18x14 inches, oil/canvas

Mitchell Johnson's paintings are in the permanent collections of over 30 museums including the Westmont Ridley-Tree Museum in Santa Barbara, California. This painting, "Not Santa Barbara", will be included in the New Acquisitions exhibit, June-July, 2024.

Watch the Mitchell Johnson BFM Cote D'Azur television interview or read about the museum retrospective at Villa Les Camilias in Hyperallergic.