SELECTED WORKS BY Mark Grotjahn
Click on the images to enlarge
Mark Grotjahn
Untitled (Green Butterfly)
2002
oil on canvas
122 x 86.3 cm |
 |
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 (Coloured Butterfly White Background Four Wings)
2004
Coloured pencil on paper
|
 |
Mark Grotjahn’s Untitled exploits the precarious balance between analytical hard-edged abstraction and intuitive mark-making. Rendered in coloured pencil, Grotjahn develops a planar composition of receding bands suspended between sharp angled lines. Giving quirky reference to the flat matte colours of modernist palette, Grotjahn’s perfectly drafted perspective and transluscent Prismacolor shading defy the solidity of the picture plane. Set competitively against the visible smudges and scribbles of drawing process, Grotjahn integrates design precision with visceral spontaneity. |
Mark Grotjahn
Untitled (White Butterfly)
2002
oil on linen
182.9 x 61 cm |
 |
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’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 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 |
 |
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 |
 |
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. |
|
|
ARTIST INFORMATION
Mark Grotjahn's BIOGRAPHY

1968
Born Pasadena, California
Lives and works in Los Angeles
SOLO EXHIBITIONS
2005
Blum & Poe, Santa Monica, California
Stephen Friedman Gallery, London
UCLA Hammer, Los Angeles, California
2003
Anton Kern Gallery, New York
2002
Mark Grotjahn: El Gran Burrito, Boom, Chicago
Blum and Poe, Santa Monica California
2000
Blum and Poe, Santa Monica California
1998
Blum and Poe, Santa Monica California
Flowers in the Office, Brent Petersen Gallery, Los Angeles
GROUP EXHIBITIONS
2006
Painting in Tongues, Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles
2005
Ten Year Anniversary Exhibition, Stephen Friedman Gallery, London
2004
54th Carnegie International 2004-05,Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh
Coloured Pencil, KS Art, New York
I, Assassin, Wallspace, New York
2003
Blum and Poe, Los Angeles
Conversations, Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles
Pink, Gallery Min Min, Tokyo, Japan
2002
The Stray Show, Boom, Chicago
Play it as it Lays, London Institute, London
L.A. On My Mind: Recent Acquisitions from MOCA's Collection, MOCA, Los Angeles
2001
Jennifer Bornstein, Mark Grotjahn, Dave Muller, Florian Maier-Aichen, Blum and Poe Santa Monica, California
Sharing Sunsets, MOCA, Tucson, Arizona
Out of Bounds: Working off Paper, Harriet and Charles Luckman Fine Arts Complex, California State Univesity, Los Angelels
Superman in Bed: Kunst der Gegenwart und Fotografie Sammlung Schurmann, Museum am Ostwall, Dortmund, Germany
David Brody, Mark Grotjahn, Wade Guyton, Siobhan Liddell, Gorney Bravin and Lee, New York
2000
H2O, Works on Paper, Los Angeles
'00, Barbara Gladstone Gallery, New York
Drawings from Los Angeles, Studio Guenzani, Milan, Italy
Young and Dumb, Acme, Los Angeles
1999
After the Gold Rush, Thread Waxing Space, New York
1998
Entropy at Home, Neuer Aachener Kunstverein, Aachen, Germany
Winter Selections 1998, Drawing Center, New York
Works on Paper, Derek Eller Gallery, New York
Elias Fine Art Gallery, Boston
1997
Brent Petersen, Mark Grotjahn, Paul Sietsema, Gallery 16, San Francisco
Helmut Federle, Gunter Umberg, Mark Grotjahn, Ingo Muller, Anthony Meier Fine Arts, San Francisco
1996
Backroads with Doug McConnell, Four Walls, San Francisco
1995
Access, Southern Exposure, San Francisco
Skowhegan Drive-in, collaboration with Doug Corson, Mark Grotjahn and Mel Chin, Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture, Skowhegan, Maine
|
| |
|
Other artists in ABSTRACT AMERICA: NEW PAINTING AND SCULPTURE
Carter | Eric and Heather ChanSchatz | Kristin Baker | John Bauer | Mark Bradford | Joe Bradley | Tom Burr | Jedediah Caesar | Peter Coffin | Guerra de la Paz | Francesca DiMattio | Bart Exposito | Stephen G. Rhodes | Mark Grotjahn | Rachel Harrison | Jacob Hashimoto | Patrick Hill | Matt Johnson | Ryan Johnson | Paul Lee | Chris Martin | Elizabeth Neel | Baker Overstreet | Amanda Ross-Ho | Sterling Ruby | Gedi Sibony | Amy Sillman | Agathe Snow | Kirsten Stoltmann | Dan Walsh | Jonas Wood | Aaron Young
|
| |
|