Nate Lowman’s studio wall featuring paintings and works on paper that illustrate a new direction for the artist. Photo by Jeffrey Sturges
This edition of Studio debuts a new body of work by Nate Lowman, also on view at The Armory Show, that builds upon the artist’s distinctive process by introducing a new gestural technique to his practice. The paintings take imagery mined from the news and art history as a starting point to create new narratives, and capture the surprising, sublime beauty in what is often dark subject matter.
Night Watch catalyzed a new technique for the artist: rather than covering the work with his trademark gradient of black dots that recall the blur of an enlarged Xerox, Lowman uses gestural markings that leave open spaces for the luminosity and vibrant color of the sky and moon to shine through and engage with vivid areas of wild abstraction.
Night Watch, 2021
In these new works, Lowman projects multiple layers of imagery onto his canvases. Here, he combines hand-drawn markings, a photo from a newspaper advertisement, and painting.
Lowman’s process reveals traces of his studio practice through the oil, ink, and stray marks that accumulate over time on his canvases.
Don’t Forget to Howl at the Moon, 2021
The works are drawn from images that Lowman keeps in his archive: photos of the Bikini Atoll nuclear explosions in the 1940s, US drones flying above Pakistan in the early 2000s, volcanic eruptions as seen in the news and art history, and ads clipped from newspapers.
Where is Your Rupture no. 75, 2021
“2021 has seemed to burst with a chorus of volcanic eruptions. Even (or maybe especially) from afar, these eruptions make you feel connected to history. Whatever happens just above the tectonic plates leading to a rupture that sends lava out of the top of the cone is strangely grounding. But then the ground itself is on fire and you also have to deal with the extreme poetics of fire raining from the sky. So it’s devastatingly creative.”
—Nate Lowman
Frankenstein Vesuvio di Caffi no. 2, 2021
Traditionally Lowman has not worked on paper. Here, he debuts his first series in this medium.
Paper Vesuvio di Caffi, 2021
In keeping with his practice of combining and reusing imagery, the artist drew from various pictures by the nineteenth-century Italian painter Ippolito Caffi—found in a book of Caffi’s studies of Mount Vesuvius that Lowman discovered—to assemble sky, volcano, and water into this new work.
A view of Nate Lowman’s studio featuring an open book with Ippolito Caffi’s color studies of Mount Vesuvius. Photo by Jeffrey Sturges
Paper Bikini, 2021
Lowman clipped this image—which has come to represent the 1940s and ’50s nuclear blasts in the Bikini islands—from a newspaper article. The landscape is still uninhabitable an entire generation later.
A detail of Nate Lowman’s workspace featuring an archival reference image, color chart, and the drawings he projects onto his canvas. Photo by Jeffrey Sturges
Paper-Seltzer, 2021
Drawn from a stock photo in a magazine article about pain, Paper-Seltzer features strong graphic lines and commercial imagery that references the pop imagery of Roy Lichtenstein and Andy Warhol.
Kill the Pain no. 2, 2021
You Can’t Win, 2021
This work is based on one of Hermann Rorschach’s original tests, a subject matter that Andy Warhol made famous through his 1984 series.
Remote Control (Scribble), 2021
Remote Control (Scribble) is based on a 2014 photograph of a drone flying over the mountains of North Waziristan, Pakistan.
Dropcloth Scribble Drone, 2021
Nate Lowman’s studio floor featuring a drop cloth, a material that he often repurposes as canvas. Photo by Jeffrey Sturges
“It’s what you think painting is supposed to be like: dirty, messy, fun, bright and wild, with big swaths of color, but it tightens up into an iconic image in the end. It engages the language of wild abstraction and also the polar opposite, pop, and it’s very rewarding to do.”
—Nate Lowman
Nate Lowman in his studio, 2021. Photo by Jeffrey Sturges
Inquire about works from this past Online Viewing Room