September 2012
It suggests itself to describe Molly Zuckerman-Hartungs works as abstract paintings, yet this doesnt quite hit the nail on the head. One can obviously relate her pieces to the formal variants of American abstraction as represented by Mary Heilmann, Helen Frankenthaler, Agnes Martin, or also Jackson Pollock. Her material assemblages composed of oil, acrylic and spray paint, canvas, cut-up canvas, pasted shreds of canvas, and found objects or prints, are structurally akin to the New Realism of a Robert Rauschenberg, the poetic recycling of reality, but they also critically question reality. This is accompanied by a reflection on social understandings of value, the combination of high and low culture in art. As with a perpetual motion machine, opposites such as beautiful/ugly, feminine/masculine, analytical/emotional, concentrated/proliferating, and sculpture/painting in Molly Zuckerman-Hartungs works trigger the reflection on the theoretical subtext of painting. The viewer fragmentarily reads texts about punk, sex, critical and political theory, and, of course, autobiographical subjectivity in her works. Dealing with theoretical, philosophical and gender-specific views of social and artistic forms is the subtext of the artist, who in the process of production also questions her own role. Hidden behind the individual letters of the alphabet on her website, one finds her own essays, statements or quotes in dialogue with theorists such as Chantal Mouffe, Susan Sonntag or Claude Levi-Strauss, song lyrics, poems, links to befriended artists, or a list of Painters we should know. This infinite process of a conceptual analysis of the question of context and its hegemonic power to define a painting is in line with Zuckerman-Hartungs work process. The production of a painting can take several years, its completion remains an endeavour that from the artists perspective is a hazardous one, as is the case with her new pieces, Monster Energy or Prairie Winds (both 2010-2012). The works are doubtless abstract, the canvases are cut up, joined together, nailed, paint was applied in numerous layers, removed again, and found objects were attached. In this manner, Molly Zuckerman-Hartungs works of art construct a critical narrative field on the status of painting and simultaneously depict the perception of reality in our society, in the here and now.