Skip navigation
Saatchi Gallery
Saatchi Gallery
4 NEW SENSATIONS 2009 CHANNEL4 TV PRIZE AND EXHIBITION FOR SAATCHI ONLINE ART STUDENTS



Saatchi Gallery
new gallery virtual tour
saatchi gallery london



Saatchi Gallery
 
GALLERY HIRE
 FOR EVENTS
saatchi spacer

English to Chinese English to Dutch English to French
English to German English to Italian English to Japanese
English to Korean English to Portuguese English to Russian
English to Hebrew English to Polish English to Ukrainian
English to Spanish English to Arabic English to Brazilian



publications
School Visits
Talks And Workshops
SCHOOLS' PRIZE
visitor information
press Contact
membership
saatchi spacer
LINKS - ADD YOURS
saatchi spacer
saatchi spacer
black spacer

*


*


*


*
*


*
*



*

TOP 200 ARTISTS
OF THE 20TH CENTURY
TO NOW


TIMES READERS AND SAATCHI ONLINE VISITORS VOTE FOR THEIR FAVOURITE ARTISTS

AFTER 1.4 MILLION VOTES WERE CAST, HERE ARE YOUR LEADING 200 ARTISTS:

-Pablo Picasso
-Paul Cezanne
-Gustav Klimt
-Claude Monet
-Marcel Duchamp
-Henri Matisse
-Jackson Pollock
-Andy Warhol
-Willem De Kooning
-Piet Mondrian
-Paul Gauguin
-Francis Bacon
-Robert Rauschenberg
-Georges Braque
-Wassily Kandinsky
-Constantin Brancusi
-Kasimir Malevich
-Jasper Johns
-Frida Kahlo
-Martin Kippenberger
-Paul Klee
-Egon Schiele
-Donald Judd
-Bruce Nauman
-Alberto Giacometti
-Salvador Dalí
-Auguste Rodin
-Mark Rothko
-Edward Hopper
-Lucian Freud
-Richard Serra
-Rene Magritte
-David Hockney
-Philip Guston
-Henri Cartier-Bresson
-Pierre Bonnard
-Jean-Michel Basquiat
-Max Ernst
-Diane Arbus
-Georgia O'Keeffe
-Cy Twombly
-Max Beckmann
-Barnett Newman
-Giorgio De Chirico
-Roy Lichtenstein
-Edvard Munch
-Pierre Auguste Renoir
-Man Ray
-Henry Moore
-Cindy Sherman
-Jeff Koons
-Tracey Emin
-Damien Hirst
-Yves Klein
-Henri Rousseau
-Chaim Soutine
-Arshile Gorky
-Amedeo Modigliani
-Umberto Boccioni
-Jean Dubuffet
-Eva Hesse
-Edouard Vuillard
-Carl Andre
-Juan Gris
-Lucio Fontana
-Franz Kline
-David Smith
-Joseph Beuys
-Alexander Calder
-Louise Bourgeois
-Marc Chagall
-Gerhard Richter
- Balthus
-Joan Miro
-Ernst Ludwig Kirchner
-Frank Stella
-Georg Baselitz
-Francis Picabia
-Jenny Saville
-Dan Flavin
-Alfred Stieglitz
-Anselm Kiefer
-Matthew Barney
-George Grosz
-Bernd And Hilla Becher
-Sigmar Polke
-Brice Marden
-Maurizio Cattelan
-Sol LeWitt
-Chuck Close
-Edward Weston
-Joseph Cornell
-Karel Appel
-Bridget Riley
-Alexander Archipenko
-Anthony Caro
-Richard Hamilton
-Clyfford Still
-Luc Tuymans
-Claes Oldenburg

TO SEE THE FULL 200 CLICK HERE
*



*
Saatchi Gallery
Mark Grotjahn, Art

Mark Grotjahn


Selected Works by Mark Grotjahn

Click on images to enlarge

Mark Grotjahn

Untitled (Green Butterfly)

2002
oil on canvas

122 x 86.3 cm

Mark Grotjahn, Untitled

Drawing influence from both modernist abstraction and pop culture, Mark Grotjahn’s paintings are intimate seductions, slipping between hard-edged design and emotive expression. Using perspective as a skewed logic, Grotjahn’s canvases often incorporate two vanishing points in close proximity; from a doubled ‘centre’ Untitled (Green Butterfly) radiates bands of golden hues, each creating a deception of space. Applied in thick impasto, their sleek forms dissolve into terrains of concentrated brushwork giving an effect of physical solidity. With each triangle drafted in a single opaque layer, the canvas’s texture and traces of under-painting create subtly shifting tones, flirting between the illusive and the concrete.



Mark Grotjahn

Untitled (large coloured butterfly white background 10 wings)

2004
coloured pencil on paper
176.8 x 130 cm

Mark Grotjahn, Untitled

Mark Grotjahn's Untitled evokes a sense of the metaphysical. Set atop an effused abstracted ground, his forms stretch and recede in the convoluted logic of linear perspective. Executed in coloured pencil, the optical illusion of adjoining rainbow-toned lines becomes compounded as a feat of concentration. Each band painstakingly filled by the artist's hand, Grotjahn's geometric form is delineated by the embossed traces of his endeavour, imprinting his personal gestures within an emblem of perfection.

 

Mark Grotjahn

Untitled (White Butterfly)

2002
oil on linen
182.9 x 61 cm

Mark Grotjahn, Untitled

In Mark Grotjahn's Untitled (White Butterfly) bands of milky pigment expand from the centre as rays of blinding light, drawing connotations of speed, virtual space, and religiosity in their sumptuous satiny finish. Within the intense concentration of Grotjahn's monochrome, subtle diversity of hue, texture, and tone emerge as an infinite expansion. Recalling a wide range of artistic reference - from Malevich's white on white compositions, Newman's mystical colour fields, to El Greco's elongated Ascension - Grotjahn fuses past and present with a timeless spirituality.

 

Mark Grotjahn

Untitled (Orange Butterfly Green MG 03)

2003
oil on linen
132.1 x 71.1 cm

Mark Grotjahn, Untitled

Mark Grotjahn’s Untitled (Orange Butterfly Green MG 03) evokes a sense of the metaphysical. Set atop an effused abstracted ground, his forms stretch and recede in the convoluted logic of linear perspective. Excecuted in coloured pencil, the optical illusion of adjoining rainbow-toned lines becomes compounded as a feat of concentration. Each band painstakingly filled by the artist’s hand, Grotjahn’s geometric form is delineated by the embossed traces of his endeavour, imprinting his personal gestures within an emblem of perfection.

 

Mark Grotjahn

Untitled (Black Butterfly Dioxide Purple MPG 05)

2005
Oil on Linen
147 x 122cm

Mark Grotjahn, Untitled

Mark Grotjahn infuses the detached genre of minimalist painting with a sympathetic playfulness. Bringing to mind Frank Stella’s black paintings, Grotjahn’s Untitled (Black Butterfly Dioxide Purple MPG 05) subverts the stark precision of modernism with impulsive centrifugal composition and skewed geometry. The attraction of Grotjahn’s painting lies in its subtle imperfections: brush marks expand with estimated gesture, and hand drawn angles and lines suggest an amenable humility. Painted in bold 80s power colours and hallmarked with tie-dye MG logo, Grotjahn’s Untitled celebrates instinct over analytical purity.

 

Mark Grotjahn

Untitled
(Lavender Butterfly Jacaranda over Green)

2004
Oil on Linen
178 x 89 cm

Mark Grotjahn, Untitled

Using natural phenomenon as a starting point for abstraction, Mark Grotjahn’s paintings straddle the polarities of artifice and nature. In Untitled (Lavender Butterfly Jacaranda over Green), his efferent composition conveys a sensation of sublime weightless energy through simplified form. Similarly, his process and title reference the romantic vision of blooming jacaranda flowers: revealing only a hint of green under-painting, his canvas explodes in a torrent of purple hue. Transferring the experience of observation to an intrigue of creative possibility, Grotjahn harnesses the mysticism of nature through aesthetic formality.

 

Mark Grotjahn

Untitled (Face)

2007
Oil on cardboard on linen on canvas
152.4 x 129.5cm

Mark Grotjahn, Untitled (Face)

Expanding from the highly polished Butterfly paintings for which he is renowned, Grotjahn’s Untitled (Face) gets back to painting’s basics, extolling an immediacy which is radically different from his signature style. Executed on a sheet of torn cardboard mounted to a canvas, Grotjahn retains his radiant band motif complicating it with repetitively drawn, vicious-looking eyes, noses, and mouths. His thick, hurried brush marks sketch out the form with a primal celerity, re-conceiving his op-art mandala as something ritualistic and totemic.

 


*
 

The Saatchi GalleryThe Saatchi Gallery
Copyright 2003-2009 © The Saatchi Gallery : London Contemporary Art Gallery