About Marlene Dumas and her art
Text written by Patricia Ellis
"My best works are erotic displays of mental confusions (with
intrusions of irrelevant information)." Marlene Dumas
Marlene Dumas's provocative paintings of women, children, celebrities
and people of colour are as psychologically disturbing as they are violently
beautiful. Championing the under-represented classes, her characters occupy
an unholy ground where the viewer's individual morality, ethics and adherence
to ideological convention are questioned.
Marlene Dumas makes paintings with no concept of the taboo.
Racism, sexuality, religion, motherhood and childhood are all presented
with chilling honesty. Undermining universally held belief systems, Dumas
corrupts the very way images are negotiated. Stripped of the niceties of
moral consolation, Marlene Dumas's work provokes unmitigated horror. She
offers no comfort to the viewer, only an unnerving complicity and confusion
between victims and oppressors.
"It was my first time in a peepshow so when the girl smiled
at me I said "Only looking", and she replied "That's how I got started here
too"."
Removing the hierarchical value system of perception, Marlene
Dumas presents unsettling truths as paintings because there is no other
means to communicate their primal essence. Working from her own photos and
pictures found in magazine and film archives, her canvases act as sociological
studies. Subjects, already at one remove, are further physically and dispassionately
distanced by her instinctive and disquieting painting style.
Often described as an 'intellectual expressionist', Marlene
Dumas blurs the boundaries between painting and drawing. Bold lines and
shapes mix seamlessly with ephemeral washes and thick gestural brushwork.
By simplifying and distorting her subjects, Marlene Dumas creates intimacy
through alienation. Her subjects' assertive stares suggest that her paintings
aren't actually about them, but the viewer's own reaction to their perverse
circumstance. With deceptive casualness, Marlene Dumas exposes the monstrous
capacity belied by 'civilised' human nature.
Beneath Marlene Dumas's hard-hitting social dialogue is a deep-rooted
ideological equality. As one of the most profoundly feminist contemporary
artists, Marlene Dumas uses painting as a means to personally navigate history.
Her holistic approach to creation and subject undermines the discomfort
and restriction of traditional rationale. Embracing the totality of human
experience, Marlene Dumas finds an eternal beauty not in immediate pleasure,
but in the timeless gap between the cherished and unspeakable.
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