Installation view, Harold Ancart: Freeze, David Zwirner, London, 2018
Harold Ancart
Harold Ancart’s (b. 1980) work encompasses painting, drawing, and sculpture. Drawn to subjects that naturally invite contemplation, such as the horizon, clouds, flowers, mountains, and flames, Ancart often works in series, using motifs to explore the possibilities of painting.
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Ancart has referenced icebergs as a device that dissects the painting from a figurative whole into abstract parts, turning placid seascapes into a meditation on painting itself.
The first icebergs Ancart painted conformed, compositionally and chromatically, to the subject, but as he worked through the series the paintings became increasingly rich in texture and palette—the subject almost melting from a single block of white into an array of color. “The more the subject of the painting distills itself into shapes and color,” Ancart says, “the more powerful the poetic impact of the painting will be on the viewer.”
These works conjure associations with nineteenth-century Romantic landscapes by Frederic Edwin Church; the ambiguity between abstraction and figuration in the work of Philip Guston; and Josef Albers’s play on possibility and color combinations within a restricted format.
“The dignity of movement of an iceberg is due to only one-eighth of it being above water. —Ernest Hemingway, Death in the Afternoon, 1932
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