Luc Tuymans

Publisher: San Francisco Museum of Modern Art / Wexner Center for the Arts / D.A.P.

Publish Date: 2009

Edited by Madeleine Grynsztejn and Helen Molesworth. With essays by Helen Molesworth, Joseph Leo Koerner, Ralph Rugoff, and Bill Horrigan. Additional contributions by Alison Gass, Prudence Peiffer, Joshua Shirkey, and Lanka Tatersall.

Produced by the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art and the Wexner Center for the Arts in conjunction with the artist’s first full-scale American survey (2009-2011), this catalogue presents an array of original essays offering new critical perspectives on Luc Tuymans and his historical context. Featuring reproductions of approximately 75 works from 1985 to 2009, the rich plate section is accompanied by text entries that illuminate the painter’s primary subjects and themes, with particular attention paid to his working process and his adaptation of source materials. This book is not only the most comprehensive survey of Tuymans’s career to date, but also the most thorough chronology of his artistic development.

Details

Publisher: San Francisco Museum of Modern Art / Wexner Center for the Arts / D.A.P.

Artist: Luc Tuymans

Contributors: Alison Gass, Bill Horrigan, Joseph Leo Koerner, Helen Molesworth, Joshua Shirkey, Lanka Tatersall

Publication Date: 2009

ISBN: 9781933045986

Retail: $60 US & Canada | £35 | €45

Status: Not Available

Binding: Hardcover

Dimensions: 10 x 11 3/4 in (25.4 x 29.8 cm)

Pages: 228

Reproductions: 175 color

Artist and Contributors

Luc Tuymans

One of the most important painters working today, Belgian artist Luc Tuymans (b. 1958) pioneered a distinctive style of figurative painting beginning in the 1980s that has been singularly influential to his peers as well as subsequent generations of artists. The artist’s canvases are based on preexisting imagery from a range of sources and rendered in a restrained palette that belies an underlying moral complexity.

Alison Gass

Bill Horrigan

Joseph Leo Koerner

Helen Molesworth

Helen Molesworth is a Los Angeles–based writer, podcaster, and curator. Her major museum exhibitions include: Leap Before You Look: Black Mountain College 1933–1957, This Will Have Been: Art, Love, and Politics in the 1980s, and Work Ethic. She has organized monographic exhibitions of Ruth Asawa, Moyra Davey, Noah Davis, Louise Lawler, Steve Locke, Kerry James Marshall, Catherine Opie, and Luc Tuymans. She is the author of numerous catalogue essays and her writing has appeared in Artforum, Art Journal, Documents, and October. The recipient of the 2011 Bard Center for Curatorial Studies Award for Curatorial Excellence, in 2021 she received a Guggenheim Fellowship and in 2022 she was awarded The Clark Art Writing Prize.

Joshua Shirkey

Lanka Tatersall

$60