SELECTED WORKS BY Barnaby Furnas
Click on the images to enlarge
Barnaby Furnas
Duel
2004
2004, oil on canvas
325 x 193cm |
 |
Barnaby Furnas uses watercolour in a way it was never meant
for: rivalling media sensation for the limelight of graphic
seduction. Developing his own subversive world of cartoon
ultra-violence, bizarrely populated by rock stars and Honest
Abe look-a-likes, Furnas uses blood and guts as a means
to flirt with abstraction and design. In Duel, two ex-presidents
blow each other to shreds, simply for the sake of seeing
the beauty of the carnage in slow motion. |
Barnaby Furnas
Hamburger Hill
2002
Urethane on linen
182.9 x 304.8cm |
 |
Barnaby Furnas’s paintings address contemporary image construction through traditional means. Adhering to painterly convention Furnas mixes his own paint by adding pigment to urethane, a technique that results in radiant finish and pure vibrant colour. Conveying the high-impact dynamism of filmic violence, his canvases merge depicted narrative and formal concern. In pieces such as Hamburger Hill, action is played out in performative brushwork and striated composition: gun powder explosions and gory splatter are represented through simplified gesture, movement is directed through drawn and implied lines. Combining the strategies of cartooning with the decadence of high art, Furnas conceives painting as a media entrenched in historical lineage and constantly expanding to encompass new attitudes of viewing. |
Barnaby Furnas
Flood (Red Sea)
2006
330.2 x 762 cm |
 |
Reminiscent of Rothko’s vast contemplative fields, Barnaby Furnas’s Flood (Red Sea) draws upon the associations of Abstract Expressionism. Spanning over 7 meters, Flood (Red Sea) construes the transcendental as sheer power. Obliterating the serene blue ‘sky’ with frenzied swipes of red, Furnas presents a landscape as an encompassing plane of colour and texture that literally engulfs the viewer in spectacle. Incorporating biblical reference in the title, Furnas layers his abstraction as allegory, merging painting’s formal and narrative traditions in a tableau of apocalyptic beauty. |
Barnaby Furnas
Untitled (Effigy II)
2006
Urethane, spirits on burnt calf skin vellum
71.1 x 45.7 cm |
 |
Using his materials to replicate bodily substance, Barnaby Furnas's Untitled (Effigy II) is executed on the membrane surface of calf-skin vellum. Charred, punctured, and adorned with tattoo-like script, his figure sits as an emblem of torment and catharsis. Adopting the timeless and immortal qualities of portraiture, Furnas exposes the stretcher and canvas to both undermine and appropriate painting’s function as illusion. In revealing the image as a construction, Furnas evokes a sense of occult mysticism. Bringing to mind Wilde’s The Picture of Dorian Gray, or Poe’s The Oval Portrait, Furnas cossets the idea of representation as a black art. |
Barnaby Furnas
Tapestry
2005
305 x 231cm |
 |
In creating Tapestry, Barnaby Furnas captures the vibrant fluidity characteristic of his oil and watercolour paintings. His complex layered and gestural painting style is uncannily replicated in the premeditation of graphic design. Utilising the historical craft of weaving, Furnas places his rock concert on a par with historical depictions of epic battles and heroic royalty. Violence, chaos and pagan hype become immortalised as decorative patterns. Razor sharp light beams, tie-dyed psychedelia and clamouring mosh-pit lose their threatening edge, traded instead for a more monumental documentation, distanced and glorified through the time-honoured tactility of hand-crafted fabric. |
|
|
ARTIST INFORMATION
Barnaby Furnas's BIOGRAPHY
1973
Born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Lives and works in New York
SELECTED SOLO EXHIBITIONS
2005
Baltic, Gateshead
2004
Modern Art, London
2003
Marianne Boesky Gallery, New York
2002
Marianne Boesky Gallery, New York
SELECTED GROUP EXHIBITIONS
2003
Go Johnny Go, Kunsthalle Wien, Austria
War (What Is It Good For?), Museum of Contemporary Art,
Chicago
Funny Papers: Cartoons and Contemporary Drawing, Daniel
Weinberg Gallery, Los Angeles
Transnational Monster League, Derek Eller Gallery, New
York
Drawings, Metro Pictures, New York
2002
Officina Americana, Galleria d’Arte
Moderna, Bologna, Italy
The Fourth Annual Altoids Curiously Strong Collection, Los
Angeles Contemporary Exhibition, Los Angeles
2001
Marianne Boesky Gallery, New York
All American, Bellwether, Brooklyn
2000
Collector’s Choice, Exit Art,
New York “Project Room”, Artist’s Space, New York
Marianne Boesky Gallery, New York
@, P.P.O.W. Gallery, NYC, curated by Jason Murison
1999
All Terrain, Freidrich Petzel Gallery, New York
Urban Romantics, Lombard Fried Gallery, New York
|
| |
|
Other artists in ABSTRACT AMERICA: NEW PAINTING AND SCULPTURE 2
Dan Bayles | Matthew Brannon | Dan Colen | Andy Collins | Judith Eisler | Inka Essenhigh | Will Fowler | Dana Frankfort | Eric Freeman | Barnaby Furnas | Joanne Greenbaum | Marc Handelman | Douglas Kolk | Ryan McGinness | Ivan Morley | Michael Phelan | David Ratcliff | Scott Reeder | Halsey Rodman | Ruth Root | Josh Smith | Marc Swanson | Garth Weiser | Aaron Wexler
|
| |
|