Don Van Vliet 1885 - 1995
May 31, 2007- July 6, 2007
532 W 20th St
For the first time in six years, the work of Don
Van Vliet, who is best known under his musical moniker
Captain Beefheart , will be shown in two New York galleries,
Michael Werner and
Anton Kern Gallery. The exhibition at
Anton Kern Gallery will present 15 paintings and a group of
drawings form 1985 to 1995. The shows were organized in
collaboration and a catalog including a preface by P.J. Harvey
will be available.
“I was born in the desert,” is the beginning line of Don Van
Vliet’s first album, setting the tone for his entire artistic output,
which aside from being a composer and rock musician always
included writing poetry and making paintings. The magic of the
desert and its power to make seemingly inanimate and diverse
objects become alive and equal is at the center of Van Vliet’s art making.
What characterizes his music certainly sheds light onto Van Vliet’s paintings: syncopation, blues riffs,
rhythm n’ blues honking and shouting, a declamatory hick-upping style of singing (like Howlin’ Wolf on acid),
free jazz improvisation and simultaneity, as well as interlocking riffs and repeated patterns (rather than the
traditional division between melody, harmony, and rhythm). There’s a true sense of instrumental equality in
his music and this equality sits at the core of Van Vliet’s paintings.
Despite its seemingly abstract and expressionist look, nothing is random in the paintings. Everything is
composed with a large dosage of improvisational freedom to make the individual parts groove and prove
their worthiness of being equal. The riffs lock together. Van Vliet uses a broad brushstroke to define lines,
shapes, and the space in between, keeping it unpolished, and thereby developing a pictorial vocabulary of
almost hieroglyphic pictogram-like strength. Of course, the paintings make a nod towards the ideas of
expressionism and empathy and their related histories, but in the end, they show more affinity to prehistoric
signs. Populated with animals, human figures and desert flora they conjure up memories, like incantations
conjuring up the spirits of modernism in the California desert.
Don Van Vliet was born in Glendale, CA in 1941. He released his first 7-inch single (“Diddy Wah Diddy”) in
1965 under the name of Captain Beefheart & his Magic Band . In 1969, he recorded his greatly acclaimed
forth album “Trout Mask Replica,” and after the release of his twelfth and last album in 1982, devoted
himself exclusively to painting, drawing and poetry. Van Vliet’s paintings have been shown in U.S. and
German galleries since the early 1980s. A retrospective called “Stand Up to Be Discontinued” traveled to
the Bielefelder Kunstverein, Museum Waldhof, Bielefeld, Germany (1993), the Kunsthallen Brandts
Klæderfabrik, Odense, Denmark, Brighton Museum & Art Gallery, Brighton, UK (both 1994), and the
Cleveland Center for Contemporary Art, Cleveland, OH (1995). He currently lives in the California desert.
Books and DVDs related to artists in this show| Location | map | | Gallery | Anton Kern Gallery | | Address | 532 W 20th St New York (Chelsea) NY, 10011 United States | | Phone | 212-367-9663 | | Fax | 212-367-8135 | | Hours | Tue-Sat 10-6 | |
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