Gerhard Richter (born February 9, 1932) is a German visual artist. Richter has simultaneously produced abstract and photorealistic painted works, as well as photographs and glass pieces, thus undermining the concept of the artist’s obligation to maintain a single cohesive style.[citation needed] Richter is regarded as the Top-Selling Living Artist. In 2011, Richter's works achieved prices higher than any other living artist. His works sold for more than $200 million, topping auction result totals for Claude Monet, Alberto Giacometti, and Mark Rothko combined.[5]
The son of a schoolteacher[6], Gerhard Richter was born in Dresden, Saxony, and grew up in Reichenau, Lower Silesia, and in Waltersdorf (Zittauer Gebirge) in the Upper Lusatian countryside. He left school after 10th grade and apprenticed as an advertising and stage-set painter, before studying at the Dresden Academy of Fine Arts. In 1948 he terminated the higher professional school in Zittau, and, between 1949 and 1951, was trained there in writing as well as in stage and advertising painting.[citation needed] In 1950 his application for membership in the Hochschule für Bildende Künste Dresden (Dresden University of Visual Arts, founded in 1764) was rejected.[citation needed] He finally began his study at the Dresden Academy of Fine Arts in 1951. His teachers were Karl von Appen, Ulrich Lohmar and Will Grohmann.
In these early days of his career he prepared a wall painting ("Communion with Picasso", 1955) for the refectory of this Academy of Arts as part of his B.A. A further mural followed within the Hygiene-Museum (German Hygiene Museum) with the title "Lebensfreude" ("Joy of life") for his diploma.[citation needed]
Both paintings had been painted over for ideological reasons after Richter escaped from East to West Germany (two months before the building of the Berlin Wall); after German reunification, the wall painting Joy of life (1956) was uncovered in two places in the stairway of the German Hygiene Museum, and after the millennium these two uncovered windows with a look at the Joy of Life had been newly recovered. From 1957 to 1961 Richter worked as a master trainee in the academy and took orders for the former state of the GDR. During this time he worked intensively at murals (Arbeiterkampf, which means Worker fight), on paintings in oil (e.g. portraits of the East German actress Angelica Domroese and of Richter's first wife Ema), on various self portraits and furthermore on a panorama of Dresden with the neutral name Stadtbild (Townscape, 1956).
When he arrived in West Germany, Richter began to study at the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf under Karl Otto Götz together with Sigmar Polke, Konrad Lueg and Gotthard Graubner. With Polke and Lueg he introduced the term Kapitalistischer Realismus (Capitalistic Realism)[7] as an anti-style of art, appropriating the pictorial shorthand of advertising. This title also referred to the realist style of art known as Socialist Realism, then the official art doctrine of the Soviet Union, but it also commented upon the consumer-driven art doctrine of western capitalism. Later, Lueg founded the gallery Konrad Fischer in Düsseldorf.
Richter taught as a visiting professor at the Hochschule für bildende Künste Hamburg, and the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design, and returned in 1971 to Düsseldorf Art Academy as a professor for over 15 years.
In 1983, Richter resettled from Düsseldorf to Cologne, where he still lives and works today.Gerhard Richter Guggenheim Collection.</ref>
Richter married Marianne Eufinger in 1957; she gave birth to his first daughter. He married his second wife, the sculptor Isa Genzken, in 1982. Richter had a son and daughter with his third wife, Sabine Moritz after they were married in 1995.
In 2005 Richter, in an interview by the German political magazine Der Spiegel, wondered why citizens of Salzburg did not protest against a sculpture by Markus Lüpertz, and described the work as expressing the deprivation of public art sponsorship in Germany. The sculpture, declared as a homage to Mozart by its creator, was promptly attacked by a right-wing art activist from Austria and badly damaged.[8] The statue depicted a grotesque nude figure with both male and female features [2][3] and was characterized as pornography by the two elderly men prosecuted for the vandalism during which they painted over it and stuck feathers onto it.[9]
Nearly all of Richter’s work demonstrates both illusionistic space that seems natural and the physical activity and material of painting—as mutual interferences. For Richter, reality is the combination of new attempts to understand—to represent; in his case, to paint—the world surrounding us.
Richter created various painting pictures from black-and-white photographs during the 1960s and early 1970s, basing them on a variety of sources: from newspapers and books, sometimes incorporating their captions, as in Helga Matura (1966); private snapshots; aerial views of towns and mountains, for example Cityscape Madrid (1968) and Alps (1968); seascapes (1969–70); and a large multi-partite work made for the German Pavilion in the 1972 Venice Biennale, Forty-eight Portraits (1971–2), for which he chose mainly the faces of composers such as Gustav Mahler and Jean Sibelius, and of writers such as H. G. Wells and Franz Kafka.[10]
Many of these paintings are made in a multi-step process of representations. He starts with a photograph, which he has found or taken himself, and projects it onto his canvas, where he traces it for exact form. Taking his color palette from the photograph, he paints to replicate the look of the original picture. His hallmark "blur"—sometimes a softening by the light touch of a soft brush, sometimes a hard smear by an aggressive pull with his squeegee—has two effects:[citation needed]
- It offers the image a photographic appearance; and
- Paradoxically, it testifies the painter's actions, both skilled and coarse, and the plastic nature of the paint itself.
In some paintings blurs and smudges are severe enough to disrupt the image; it becomes hard to understand or believe. The subject is nullified.[original research?] In these paintings, images and symbols (such as landscapes, portraits, and news photos) are rendered fragile illusions, fleeting conceptions in our constant reshaping of the world.
Richter has stated[citation needed] that the use of photographic imagery as a starting point for his early paintings resulted from an attempt to escape the complicated process of deciding what to paint, along with the critical and theoretical implications accompanying such decisions within the context of a modernist discourse. To achieve this, Richter began amassing photos from magazines, books, etc., many of which became the subject matter of his early photography-based paintings. Thus the Atlas was born: Atlas is an ongoing, encyclopedic work composed of approximately 4,000 photographs, reproductions or cut-out details of photographs and illustrations, grouped together on approximately 600 separate panels.[11] When Atlas was first exhibited in 1972 at the Museum for Hedendaagse Kunst in Utrecht under the title "Atlas der Fotos und Skizzen," it included 315 parts. The work has continued to expand, and was exhibited later in full form at the Lenbachhaus in Munich in 1989, the Museum Ludwig in Cologne in 1990, and at Dia Art Foundation in New York in 1995.
While elements of landscape painting appeared initially in Richter’s work early on in his career in 1963, the artist began his independent series of landscapes in 1968 after his first vacation, an excursion that landed him besotted with the terrain of Corsica.[12] From around 1964 Richter made a number of portraits of dealers, collectors, artists and others connected with his immediate professional circle. Richter's two portraits of Betty, his daughter, were made in 1977 and 1988 respectively; the three portraits titled IG were made in 1993 and depict the artist's second wife, Isa Genzken; Lesende (1994) portrays Sabine Moritz, whom Richter married in 1995, shown absorbed in the pages of a magazine.[13] Many of his realist paintings reflect on the history of National Socialism, creating paintings of family members who had been members, as well as victims of, the Nazi party.[14] From 1966, as well as photographs given to him by others, Richter began using photographs he had taken as the basis for portraits.[15] In 1975, on the occasion of a show in Düsseldorf, Gilbert and George commissioned Richter to make a portrait of them.[16]
Richter began making prints in 1965. He was most active before 1974, only completing sporadic projects since that time. In the period 1965–74, during which Richter made most of his prints (more than 100), the same or similar subjects often occurred in both his paintings and prints.[17] He has explored a variety of photographic printmaking processes – screenprint, photolithography, and collotype – in search of inexpensive mediums that would lend a "non-art" appearance to his work.[18] He stopped working in print media in 1974, at about the same time as he gave up painting from found photographs, and began to use photographs he took himself.[17]
Richter's landscapes have emerged since 1968 as an independent work group in his oeuvre.[19]In 1972 Richter had embarked on a ten-day trip to Greenland, originally having intended to be accompanied by his friend Hanne Darboven, but eventually journeying alone. His intention was to experience and record the desolate arctic landscape. In 1976 four large paintings, each titled Seascape emerged from the Greenland photographs.[20]
In 1982 and 1983, Richter made a series of paintings of Candles and Skulls that relate to a longstanding tradition of still life memento mori painting. Each composition is most commonly based on a photograph taken by Richter in his own studio. Influenced by old master vanitas painters such as Georges de la Tour and Francisco de Zurbarán, the artist began to experiment with arrangements of candles and skulls placed in varying degrees of natural light, sitting atop otherwise barren tables. The Candle paintings coincided with his first large-scale abstract paintings, and represent the complete antithesis to those vast, colorful and playfully meaningless works. Richter has made only 27 of these still lifes.[21] In 1995, the artist marked the 50th anniversary of the allied bombings of his hometown Dresden during the Second World War. His solitary candle was reproduced on a monumental scale and placed overlooking the River Elbe as a symbol of rejuvenation.[22]
In a 1988 series of 15 ambiguous photo paintings entitled Baader-Meinhof (October 18, 1977) he depicted four members of the Red Army Faction (RAF), a German left-wing terrorist organization. These paintings were created from black-and-white newspaper and police photos. Three RAF members were found dead in their prison cells on October 18, 1977, and the cause of their deaths was the focus of widespread controversy.[23] In the late 1980s, Richter had begun to collect images of the group which he used as the basis for the 15 paintings exhibited for the first time in Krefeld in 1989. The paintings were based on an official portrait of Ulrike Meinhof during her years as a radical journalist; on photographs of the arrest of Holger Meins; on police shots of Gudrun Ensslin in prison; on Andreas Baader's bookshelves and the record player to conceal his gun; on the dead figures of Meinhof, Ensslin, and Baader; and on the funeral of Ensslin, Baader, and Jan-Carl Raspe.
Since 1989, Richter has worked on creating new images by dragging wet paint over photographs. The photographs, not all taken by Richter himself, are mostly snapshots of daily life: family vacations, pictures of friends, mountains, buildings and streetscapes.
Richter was flying to New York on September 11th, 2001, at the time of the attacks on the World Trade Centre. His plane was diverted to Halifax, Nova Scotia. A few years later he made one small painting specifically about the planes crashing into the Twin Towers.[24] In September: A History Painting by Gerhard Richter, Robert Storr situates Richter's 2005 painting "September" within a brand of anti-ideological thought that he finds throughout Richter’s work, he considers how the ubiquitous photographic documentation of the September 11th attacks affects the uniqueness of one’s distinct remembrance of the events, and he offers a valuable comparison to Richter’s “October 18, 1977” cycle.[25]
In the 2000s, Richter made a number of works that dealt with scientific phenomena. In 2003, he produced several paintings with the same title: Silicate. Large oil-on-canvas pieces, these show latticed rows of light- and dark-grey blobs whose shapes quasi-repeat as they race across the frame, their angle modulating from painting to painting. They depict a photo, published in the FAZ, of a computer-generated simulacrum of reflections from the silicon dioxide found in insects' shells.[26]
In 1969, Richter produced the first of a group of grey monochromes that consist exclusively of the textures resulting from different methods of paint application.
In 1976, Richter first gave the title Abstract Painting to one of his works. By presenting a painting without even a few words to name and explain it, he felt he was “letting a thing come, rather than creating it.” In his abstract pictures, Richter builds up cumulative layers of non-representational painting, beginning with brushing big swaths of primary color onto canvas.[27] The paintings evolve in stages, based on his responses to the picture’s progress: the incidental details and patterns that emerge. Throughout his process, Richter uses the same techniques he uses in his representational paintings, blurring and scraping to veil and expose prior layers. From the mid 1980s, Richter began to use a home-made squeegee to rub and scrape the paint that he had applied in large bands across his canvases. In the 1990s the artist began to run his squeegee up and down the canvas in an ordered fashion to produce vertical columns that take on the look of a wall of planks.[28]
Richter’s abstract work is remarkable for the illusion of space that develops, ironically, out of his incidental process: an accumulation of spontaneous, reactive gestures of adding, moving, and subtracting paint. Despite unnatural palettes, spaceless sheets of color, and obvious trails of the artist’s tools, the abstract pictures often act like windows through which we see the landscape outside. As in his representational paintings, there is an equalization of illusion and paint. In those paintings, he reduces worldly images to mere incidents of Art. Similarly, in his abstract pictures, Richter exalts spontaneous, intuitive mark-making to a level of spatial logic and believability.
Firenze continues a cycle of 99 works conceived in the autumn of 1999 and executed in the same year and thereafter. The series of overpainted photographs, or übermalte Photographien, consists of small paintings bearing images of the city of Florence, created by the artist as a tribute to the music of Steve Reich and the work of Contempoartensemble, a Florence-based group of musicians.[29]
After 2000, Richter made a number of works that dealt with scientific phenomena, in particular, with aspects of reality that cannot be seen by the naked eye.[30] In 2006, Richter conceived six paintings as a coherent group under the title Cage, named after the American avant-garde composer John Cage.[31] In May 2002, Richter photographed 216 details of his abstract painting no. 648-2, from 1987. Working on a long table over a period of several weeks, Richter combined these 10 x 15 cm details with 165 texts on the Iraq war, published in the German FAZ newspaper on March 20 and 21. This work was published in 2004 as a book entitled War Cut.
As early as 1966 Richter had made paintings based on colour charts, using the rectangles of colour as found objects in an apparently limitless variety of hue; these culminated in 1973–4 in a series of large-format pictures such as 256 Colours.[10] Richter painted three series of Color Chart paintings between 1966 and 1974, each series growing more ambitious in their attempt to create through their purely arbitrary arrangement of colors.[32] The artist began his investigations into the complex permutations of color charts in 1966, with a small painting entitled 10 Colors.[33] The charts provided anonymous and impersonal source material, a way for Richter to disassociate color from any traditional, descriptive, symbolic or expressive end. When he began to make these paintings, Richter had his friend Blinky Palermo randomly call out colors, which Richter then adopted for his work. Chance thus plays its role in the creation of his first series.
Returning to color charts in the 1970s, Richter changed his focus from the readymade to the conceptual system, developing mathematical procedures for mixing colours and chance operations for their placement.[34] The range of the colors he employed was determined by a mathematical system for mixing the primary colors in graduated amounts. Each color was then randomly ordered to create the resultant composition and form of the painting. Richter's second series of Color Charts was begun in 1971 and consisted of only five paintings. In the final series of Color Charts which preoccupied Richter throughout 1973 and 1974, additional elements to this permutational system of color production were added in the form of mixes of a light grey, a dark gray and later, a green.
Richter’s 4900 Colours from 2007 consisted of bright monochrome squares that have been randomly arranged in a grid pattern to create stunning fields of kaleidoscopic color. It was produced at the same time he developed his design for the south transept window of Cologne Cathedral. 4900 Colours consists of 196 panels in 25 colors that can be reassembled in 11 variations – from a single expansive surface to multiple small-format fields. Richter developed Version II – 49 paintings, each of which measures 97 by 97 centimeters – especially for the Serpentine Gallery.[35]
Richter began to use glass in his work in 1967, when he made Four Panes of Glass.[36] These plain sheets of glass could tilt away from the poles on whicht they were mounted at an angle that changed from one installation to the next. In 1970, he and Blinky Palermo jointly submitted designs for the sports facilities for the 1972 Olympic Games in Munich. For the front of the aren, they proposed an array of glass windows in twenty-seven different colors; each color would appear fifty times, with the distribution determined randomly. In 1981, for a two-person show with Georg Baselitz in Düsseldorf, Richter produced the first of the monumental transparent mirrors that appear intermittently thereafter in his oeuvre; the mirrors are significantly larger than Richter's paintings and feature adjustable steel mounts. For pieces such as Mirror Painting (Grey, 735-2) (1991), the mirrors were coloured grey by the pigment attached to the back of the glass.[37] Arranged in two rooms, Richter presented an ensemble of paintings and colored mirrors in a special pavilion designed in collaboration with architect Paul Robbrecht at Documenta 9 in Kassel in 1992.[38]
In 2002, for the Dia Art Foundation, Richter created a glass sculpture in which seven parallel panes of glass refract light and the world beyond, offering altered visions of the exhibition space; Spiegel I (Mirror I) and Spiegel II (Mirror II), a two-part mirror piece from 1989 that measures 7' tall and 18' feet long, which alters the boundaries of the environment and again changes one's visual experience of the gallery; and Kugel (Sphere), 1992, a stainless steel sphere that acts as a mirror, reflecting the space.[39]
In 2010 the Drawing Center showed Lines which do not exist, a survey of Richter's drawings from 1966 to 2005, including works made using mechanical intervention such as attaching a pencil to an electric hand drill. It was the first career overview of Richter in the United States since 40 Years of Painting at the Museum of Modern Art in 2002.[40] In a review of Lines which do not exist, R. H. Lossin writes in The Brooklyn Rail: "Viewed as a personal (and possibly professional) deficiency, Richter’s drawing practice consisted of diligently documenting something that didn’t work—namely a hand that couldn’t draw properly. …Richter displaces the concept of the artist’s hand with hard evidence of his own, wobbly, failed, and very material appendage."[41]
Throughout his career, Richter has mostly declined lucrative licensing deals and private commissions.[42] In 1980, Richter and Isa Genzken were commissioned to design the König-Heinrich-Platz underground station in Duisburg; it was only completed in 1992. In 1986, Richter received a commission for two large-scale paintings - Victoria I and Victoria II - from Victoria insurance company in Düsseldorf.[43] In 1990, along with Sol LeWitt and Oswald Mathias Ungers, he created works for the Bayerische Hypotheken- und Wechselbank in Düsseldorf. In 1998, he installed wall piece based on the colours of Germany's flag in the rebuilt Reichstag in Berlin.
In 2002, the same year as his MoMA retrospective, Richter was asked to design a stained glass window in the Cologne Cathedral In August 2007, his window was unveiled. It is an 113 square metres (1,220 sq ft) abstract collage of 11,500 pixel-like squares in 72 colors, randomly arranged by computer (with some symmetry), reminiscent of his 1974 painting "4096 colours". Although the artist waived any fee, the costs of materials and mounting the window came to around €370,000 ($506,000). However the costs were covered by donations from more than 1,000 people.[44] Cardinal Joachim Meisner did not attend the window's unveiling; he had preferred a figurative representation of 20th century Christian martyrs and said that Richter's window would fit better in a mosque or prayer house.[45][46][47] A professed atheist with "a strong leaning towards Catholicism", Richter's three children with his third wife were baptized in the Cologne Cathedral.[48]
Throughout the body of Richter's work one can often observe waves of minimalism appearing only to disappear again. It has been noted that perhaps it may be necessary to view Richter as a conceptual artist wherein his individual pieces point towards a very painterly approach, while possibly this may not be his intent. If one views the progressions in the individual series as single works, a very different concept erupts. While many critics agree that this analysis may be necessary, let us take it one step further: assuming that Richter's small series is analogous to his entire body of work, one sees the same images of realism to blur. For example Eight Grey 2002. It may be considered, thus, that he is interested in the progression, and not in the individual images nor the qualities of paint nor any other medium he uses. In this a new idea of minimalism is born; a minimalism where the material means nothing, however, its use is technically masterful. As was said by Jan Van Eyck in the inscription on the frame of Man in the Red Turban "Als Ich Kann" which are the first words of the proverb "As I can, but not as I would."[original research?]
Richter first began exhibiting in Düsseldorf in 1963. Richter had his first gallery solo show in 1964 at Galerie Schmela in Düsseldorf. Soon after, he had exhibitions in Munich and Berlin and by the early 1970s exhibited frequently throughout Europe and the United States. In 1966, Bruno Bischofberger was the first to show the Richter's works outside Germany. Richter's first retrospective took place at the Kunsthalle Bremen in 1976 and covered works from 1962 to 1974. A traveling retrospective at Düsseldorf's Kunsthalle in 1986 was followed in 1991 by a retrospective at the Tate Gallery, London.
Richter became known to a U.S. audience in 1990, when the St. Louis Art Museum circulated Baader-Meinhof (October 18, 1977), a show that that was later seen at the Lannan Foundation in Marina del Rey, California.[49] Richter's first North American retrospective was in 1998 at the Art Gallery of Ontario and at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago. In 2002, a 40-year retrospective of Richter's work was held at the Museum of Modern Art, New York, and traveled to The Art Institute of Chicago, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, and The Hirshhorn Museum & Sculpture Garden, Washington, D.C. He has participated in several international art shows, including the Venice Biennale (1972, 1980, 1984, 1997 and 2007), as well as Documenta V (1972), VII (1982), VIII (1987), IX (1992), and X (1997).[citation needed]
The Gerhard Richter Archive was established in cooperation with the artist in 2005 as an institute of the State Art Collections in Dresden, Germany.[50]
Tate Modern - 2011-12.
Although Richter gained popularity and critical praise throughout his career, his fame burgeoned during his 2005 retrospective exhibition, which declared his place among the most important artists of the 20th century. Today, many call Gerhard Richter the best living painter. In part, this comes from his ability to explore the medium at a time when many were heralding its death. Richter has been the recipient of numerous distinguished awards, including the Staatspreis of the State Nordrhein-Westfalen, Düsseldorf, in 2000; the Wexner Prize, 1998; the Praemium Imperiale, Japan, 1997; the Golden Lion of the 47th Biennale, Venice, 1997; the Wolf Prize in Israel in 1994/5; the Kaiserring Prize der Stadt Goslar, Mönchehaus-Museum für Moderne Kunst, Goslar, Germany, 1988; the Oskar Kokoschka Prize, Vienna, 1985; the Arnold Bode Prize, Kassel, 1981; and the Junger Western Art Prize, Germany, 1961. He was made an honorary citizen of Cologne in April 2007.
Among the students who studied with Richter at the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf between 1971 and 1994 were Ludger Gerdes, Thomas Schütte, Thomas Struth, Katrin Kneffel, Michael van Ofen, and Richter's second wife, Isa Genzken. He is known to have influenced Ellsworth Kelly, Christopher Wool and Johan Andersson (artist).
He also served as source of inspiration for writers and musicians. Sonic Youth used a painting of his for the cover art for their album Daydream Nation in 1988. He was a fan of the band and did not charge for the use of his image.[citation needed] The original, over 7 metres (23 ft) square, is now showcased in Sonic Youth's studio in NYC. Don DeLillo's short story "Looking at Meinhof" describes an encounter between two strangers at the Museum of Modern Art in New York. The meeting takes place in the room displaying October 18, 1977 (1988).[54]
Following an exhibition with Blinky Palermo at Galerie Heiner Friedrich in 1971, Richter’s formal arrangement with the dealer came to an end in 1972. Thereafter Friedrich was only entitled to sell the paintings that he had already obtained contractually from Richter.[55] In the following years, Richter showed with Galerie Konrad Fischer, Düsseldorf, and Sperone Westwater, New York. Today Richter is represented by Marian Goodman,[56] his primary dealer since 1985.[21]
Today museums own roughly 38% of Richter's works, including half of his large abstract paintings.[57] Already by 2004, Richter’s annual turnover was $120m (£65m).[58] At the same time, his works often appear at auction. According to artnet, an online firm that tracks the art market, $76.9m worth of Richter’s work was sold at auction in 2010.[21] Richter's high turnover volume reflects his prolificacy as well as his popularity. As of 2012, no fewer than 545 distinct Richter's works had sold at auctions for more than $100,000. 15 of them had sold for more than $10,000,000 between 2007 and 2012.[59] Richter’s paintings have been flowing steadily out of Germany since the mid-1990s even as certain important German collectors — Frieder Burda, Josef Fröhlich, Georg Böckmann, and Ulrich Ströher — have held on to theirs.[21]
Richter's candle paintings were the first to command high auction prices. Three months after his MoMA exhibition opened in 2001, Sotheby's sold his Three Candles (1982) for $5.3 million. In February 2008, the artist's eldest daughter, Betty,[60] sold her Kerze (1983) for £7,972,500 ($15 million), triple the high estimate, at Sotheby's in London.[61] His 1982 Kerze (Candle) sold for £10.5 million ($16.5 million) at Christie's London on October 14, 2011, setting a new auction record for Richter.[62]
In February 2008, Christie's London set a first record for Richter's “capitalist realism” pictures from the 1960s by selling the painting Zwei Liebespaare (1966) for £7,300,500 ($14.3 million)[63] to Stephan Schmidheiny.[21]
In 2010, the Weserburg Modern Art Museum in Bremen, Germany, decided to sell Richter’s 1966 painting Matrosen (Sailors) in a November auction held by Sotheby’s, where John D. Arnold[64] bought it for $13 million.[65]
Another coveted group of works is the “Abstrakte Bilder” series, particularly those made after 1988, which are finished with a large squeegee rather than a brush or roller.[21] At Pierre Bergé & Associés in July 2009, Richter’s 1979 oil painting Abstraktes Bild exceeded its estimate, selling for €95,000 ($136,000).[66] Richter's Abstraktes Bild, of 1990 was made the top price of 7.2 million pounds, or about $11.6 million, at a Sotheby's sale in February 2011 to a bidder who was said by dealers to be an agent for the New York dealer Larry Gagosian.[67] In November 2011, Sotheby’s was selling a group of colorful abstract canvases by Richter, including “Abstraktes Bild 849-3, a dreamy 1997 canvas of pinks and blues that was estimated at $9 million to $12 million. It made a record price for the artist at auction when Lily Safra[68] paid $20.8 million[69] only to donate it to the Israel Museum afterwards.[68] When asked about amounts like that Richter said "It's just as absurd as the banking crisis. It's impossible to understand and it's daft!"[70]
"One has to believe in what one is doing, one has to commit oneself inwardly, in order to do painting. Once obsessed, one ultimately carries it to the point of believing that one might change human beings through painting. But if one lacks this passionate commitment, there is nothing left to do. Then it is best to leave it alone. For basically painting is idiocy.” (From Richter, "Notes 1973", in The Daily Practice of Painting, p. 78.)
At a Q&A ahead of his retrospective at the Tate Modern on October 4, 2011 he was asked: "Has the role of artist changed over the years?" to which Richter replied: "It’s more entertainment now. We entertain people.”[70]
- ^ "Art » Atlas". Gerhard Richter. http://www.gerhard-richter.com/art/atlas/. Retrieved 2011-10-08.
- ^ http://www.diaart.org/exhibs/richter/atlas/essay.html[dead link]
- ^ "Baader-Meinhof". Gerhard Richter. October 18, 1977. http://www.gerhard-richter.com/art/paintings/photo_paintings/category.php?catID=56. Retrieved 2011-10-08.
- ^ "Eight Grey". Gerhard Richter. http://www.gerhard-richter.com/exhibitions/exhibition.php?exID=43&show_per_page=32&page_selected=3. Retrieved 2011-10-08.
- ^ Kelly Crow (March 10, 2012), The Top-Selling Living Artist Wall Street Journal.
- ^ Kelly Crow (March 10, 2012), The Top-Selling Living Artist Wall Street Journal.
- ^ Grafik des kapitalistischen Realismus KP Brehmer, KH Hödicke, Sigmar Polke, Gerhard Richter, Wolf Vostell, Druckgrafik bis 1971
- ^ http://service.spiegel.de/digas/servlet/find/DID=41429248[dead link]
- ^ Van Gelder, Lawrence and Sisario, Ben, Two to be Prosecuted in Sculpture Vandalism, April 3, 2006 [1]
- ^ a b Gerhard Richter MoMA | The Collection.
- ^ Gerhard Richter: Atlas Dia Art Foundation, New York, April 27, 1995 through February 25, 1996.
- ^ Gerhard RICHTER: Vesuv (Vesuvius) 407, 1976 Philips de Pury & Company, New York.
- ^ Gerhard Richter Portraits, 26 February - 31 May 2009 National Portrait Gallery, London.
- ^ Gerhard Richter: Panorama, 6 October 2011 – 8 January 2012 Tate Modern, London.
- ^ Gerhard Richter Portraits, 26 February - 31 May 2009 National Portrait Gallery, London.
- ^ Gerhard Richter: Gilbert, George (381-1, 381-2), 1975 Tate Collection.
- ^ a b Gerhard Richter, Elizabeth I (1966) Tate Collection.
- ^ Elizabeth II by Gerhard Richter MoMA | Collection.
- ^ Gerhard Richter: Landscapes Hatje Cantz Publishing.
- ^ Elger, Dietmar: Gerhard Richter - A Life in Painting. 2010, Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p. 202.
- ^ a b c d e f Sarah Thornton (October 8, 2011), Selling Gerhard Richter - The bold standard The Economist.
- ^ Gerhard Richter, Kerze (Candle) (1982) Christie's London, Post-War & Contemporary Art Evening Auction, 14 October 2011.
- ^ Gerhard Richter: October 18, 1977 MoMA | Collection.
- ^ Aidan Dunne (October 14, 2011), From hot to cool on the Richter scale The Irish Times.
- ^ Gottlieb, Benjamin (February 2011). "ART BOOKS IN REVIEW: Gerhard Richter is Speechless". The Brooklyn Rail. http://brooklynrail.org/2011/02/artseen/gerhard-richter-is-speechless.
- ^ Tom McCarthy (September 22, 2011), Blurred visionary: Gerhard Richter's photo-paintings The Guardian.
- ^ Rachel Saltz (March 13, 2012), An Artist at Work, Looking and Judging: ‘Gerhard Richter Painting,’ a Documentary New York Times.
- ^ Gerhard Richter: Abstract Painting (809-3), 1994Tate, London.
- ^ Gerhard Richter Firenze Marian Goodman Gallery, June 21 through August 30th, 2002.
- ^ Gerhard Richter: Abstract Painting (Skin) (887-3) 2004Tate, London.
- ^ Gerhard Richter Tate Modern, Collection Displays.
- ^ Gerhard Richter (b. 1932), 4096 Farben, Sale 1373 Christie's London, 11 May 2004.
- ^ Gerhard Richter: 180 Farben (180 Colors) Philadelphia Museum of Art Collection.
- ^ Colour Chart: Reinventing Colour, 1950 to Today Tate Liverpool, 29 May through 13 September 2009.
- ^ Gerhard Richter: 4900 Colours Hatje Cantz Publishing, 2008.
- ^ Gerhard Richter: 11 Panes, 2004 Tate Collection.
- ^ Gerhard Richter: Mirror Painting (Grey, 735-2), 1991 Tate, London.
- ^ Gerhard Richter Dia Art Foundation.
- ^ Gerhard Richter and Jorge Pardo: Refraction Dia Art Foundation, September 5, 2002 through June 15, 2003.
- ^ Cotter, Holland (9). "Building an Art of Virtuouso Ambiguity". The New York Times. http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/10/arts/design/10richter.html?pagewanted=all.
- ^ Lossin, R.H. (October 2010). "Gerhard Richter: Lines which do not exist". The Brooklyn Rail. http://brooklynrail.org/2010/10/artseen/gerhard-richter-lines-which-do-not-exist.
- ^ Kelly Crow (March 10, 2012), The Top-Selling Living Artist Wall Street Journal.
- ^ Elger, Dietmar: Gerhard Richter - A Life in Painting. 2010, Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p. 278.
- ^ Cologne Cathedral Gets New Stained-Glass WindowSpiegel, August 27, 2007.
- ^ Fortini, Amanda (2007-12-09). "Pixelated Stained Glass". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/09/magazine/09pixelated.html?_r=1&ref=magazine&oref=slogin. Retrieved 2008-01-12.
- ^ Gerhard Richter weist Meisners Kritik zurück, Die Welt, 31 August 2007. (German)
- ^ Window by Artist Gerhard Richter Unveiled at Cologne Cathedral, Deutsche Welle, 27 August 2007
- ^ Peter Schjeldahl, "Many-colored Glass: Gerhard Richter and Sigmar Polke do windows, The New Yorker, May 12, 2008. Retrieved Jan. 5, 2012
- ^ Christopher Knight (April 6, 2002),A Brush With Pop - A MOMA retrospective on Gerhard Richter might make you wrongly think he's a Conceptual painter. Los Angeles Times.
- ^ www.gerhard-richter-archiv.de
- ^ "Gerhard Richter 4900 Colours: Version II". Serpentine Gallery. 2008-11-23. http://www.serpentinegallery.org/2008/06/gerhard_richter4900_colours_ve.html. Retrieved 2011-10-08.
- ^ "National Portrait Gallery - Gerhard Richter Portraits". National Portrait Gallery. 2009. http://www.npg.org.uk:8080/richter/index.htm. Retrieved 2011-10-08.
- ^ "Current Exhibitions | Gerhard Richter: Panorama". Tate Modern. http://www.tate.org.uk/modern/exhibitions/gerhardrichter/default.shtm. Retrieved 2011-10-08.
- ^ Gordon Burn (20 September 2008), 'I believe in nothing' The Guardian.
- ^ Elger, Dietmar: Gerhard Richter - A Life in Painting. 2010, Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p. 202.
- ^ Gerhard Richter Marian Goodman Gallery.
- ^ Kelly Crow (March 10, 2012), The Top-Selling Living Artist Wall Street Journal.
- ^ Roger Boyes (June 17, 2006), Nazi ghosts haunting a family The Times.
- ^ "The commodification of Gerhard Richter". http://blogs.reuters.com/felix-salmon/2012/03/04/the-commodification-of-gerhard-richter/.
- ^ Kelly Crow (March 10, 2012), The Top-Selling Living Artist Wall Street Journal.
- ^ GERHARD RICHTER B. 1932, KERZE (CANDLE), Sale: L08020 Sotheby's London, Contemporary Art Evening Auction, 27 February 2008.
- ^ Scott Reyburn (October 14, 2011), Richter $16.6 Million Record Leads Auction Boost to Art Market Bloomberg.
- ^ Gerhard Richter (b. 1932) Zwei Liebespaare, Sale 7565 Christie's London, Post-War and Contemporary Art Evening Sale, 6 February 2008.
- ^ Kelly Crow (March 10, 2012), The Top-Selling Living Artist Wall Street Journal.
- ^ German Museum to Cash in Gerhard Richter's $6 Million "Sailors" at Sotheby's ARTINFO, September 23, 2010.
- ^ "In Brief: Pierre Bergé & Associés."Art+Auction, October 2009.
- ^ Souren Melikian (February 16, 2011). "Disruptions at Sotheby's Contemporary Auction". New York Times. http://www.nytimes.com/2011/02/17/arts/17iht-Melik17.html.
- ^ a b Carol Vogel (January 12, 2012), Surprise! Israel Museum Is Receiving a RichterNew York Times.
- ^ Carol Vogel (November 9, 2011), As Stocks Fall, Art Surges At a $315.8 Million Sale New York Times.
- ^ a b "Gerhard Richter talks about Panorama at Tate Modern." Phaidon.com, October 2011.
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- Jürgen Harten (ed.): "Gerhard Richter. Paintings 1962–1985". With a catalogue raisonné from Dietmar Elger 1962–1985, Cologne 1986. (In German)
- Angelika Thill: "Catalogue raisonné since 1962". In: Kunst- und Ausstellungshalle der Bundesrepublik Deutschland GmbH (ed.): "Gerhard Richter", Ostfildern-Ruit 1993. (Mrs. Thill offers the now accepted catalogue raisonné between 1963 and 1993, without Gerhard Richter's early works before 1962 after 1993, in German)
- Gerhard Richter: "The Condition of History." In: Charles Harrison, & Paul Wood (Eds.), "Art in Theory 1900-1990". An Anthology of Changing Ideas, Malden/Mass. (Blackwell Publishers Ltd.), 1999.
- Eckhart Gillen: "Gerhard Richter: Mr. Heyde or the murders are among us". The battle with the trauma of the displaced history of Western Germany. In: Eckhart Gillen: Problems in searching for the truth (…), Berlin 2002, p. 186–191. (In German)
- Dietmar Elger: "Gerhard Richter. Painter," Cologne (Dumont-Biography) 2002. (In German) ISBN 3-8321-5848-0
- Robert Storr: "Gerhard Richter, Painting," Ostfildern-Ruit (Hatje Cantz) 2002. (In German) ISBN 3-7757-1169-4
- Dietmar Elger: "Gerhard Richter, Landscapes", Ostfildern-Ruit (Hatje Cantz) 2002. ISBN 3-7757-9101-9
- Obrist Ulrich: "GERHARD RICHTER: 100 PICTURES",Hatje Cantz Publishers,2002. ISBN 978-3-7757-9100-7
- Storr Robert: "GERHARD RICHTER: FORTY YEARS OF PAINTING,The Museum of Modern Art, New York,2002. ISBN 978-1-891024-37-5
- Hubertus Butin/Stefan Gronert: "Gerhard Richter. Editions 1965-2004". Catalogue raisonné, Ostfildern-Ruit (Hatje Cantz) 2003/2004. ISBN 3-7757-1430-8
- Jürgen Schilling: "Gerhard Richter. A private collection", Duesseldorf 2004. (In German) ISBN 3-937572-00-7
- Andrew McNamara: "Optative Death: Gerhard Richter in the Wake of the Vanguard," in Elizabeth Klaver (ed.), Images of the Corpse: From the Renaissance to Cyberspace (The University of Wisconsin Press) 2004. (In English) ISBN 0-299-19790-5
- Hans-Ulrich Obrist: "Gerhard Richter. 100 paintings", Ostfildern-Ruit (Hatje Cantz) 2005. (In German) ISBN 3-89322-851-9
- Juergen Schreiber: "A painter from Germany". Gerhard Richter. A family drama, München and Zürich (Pendo publishers) 2005. (In German) ISBN 3-86612-058-3
- Jeanne Anne Nugent: "Family Album and Shadow Archive": Gerhard Richter's East, West, and all German Painting, 1949–1966. Dissertation in the History of Art presented to the Faculties of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia 2005.
- (French) Bruno Eble, Gerhard Richter : la surface du regard, L'Harmattan, 2006, 237 p. ISBN 978-2-296-01527-2
- Ernst Hohenthal: "A family secret in the public domain". New revelations about Gerhard Richter's Herr Heyde, in: Christies's Magazine, November 2006, New York and London 2006, ISSN 0266–1217 Vol. XXIII. No.5, S 62 f.
- Ulrich Bischoff/Elisabeth Hipp/Jeanne Anne Nugent: "From Caspar David Friedrich to Gerhard Richter": German Paintings from Dresden. Getty Trust Publications, Jean Paul Getty Museum, Cologne 2006.
- Adriani Goetz: "GERHARD RICHTER: PAINTINGS FROM PRIVATE COLLECTIONS",Hatje Cantz,2008. ISBN 978-3-7757-2137-0
- Obrist Hans Ulrich: " Gerhard Richter: 4900 Colours",Hatje Cantz,2009. ISBN 978-3-7757-2344-2
- Obrist Hans Ulrich,Elger Dietmar:" Gerhard Richter: Writings",D.A.P./Distributed Art Publishers, Inc.,2009. ISBN 978-1-933045-94-8
- Official website, comprehensive image database, biography, literature list and timeline for Gerhard Richter
- Quotes from Gerhard Richter's writing
- Gerhard Richter at the Museum of Modern Art
- Link to Gerhard Richter Retrospective at National Galleries of Scotland
- Selective Affinities: On Friedrich-Richter Review of Exhibition at the Getty Museum in X-TRA : Contemporary Art Quarterly
- Window by Artist Gerhard Richter Unveiled at Cologne Cathedral, August 27, 2007.
- Guggenheim: Gerhard Richter
- Gerhard Richter Archive (State Art Collections Dresden, Germany)
- Marian Goodman: Gerhard Richter
- Available Paintings and Works on Paper Galerie Ludorff, Duesseldorf, Germany
- Jerry Saltz: Gerhard Richter
- Painting Richter - Gerhard Richter - Critical Essay ArtForum, Summer, 2002
- Gerhard Richter essay by Keith Harley, MAP Magazine, Issue 16, Winter 2008
- Essay
- SFMOMA - Gerhard Richter Making sense of modern art
- actual exhibitions with Gerhard Richter
- Take a picture... Umpteen Grey (to Gerhard Richter)
- Gerhard Richter news, books and exhibition
- Current exhibitions and connection to galeries at Artfacts.Net
- "18. Oktober 1977: Gerhard Richter’s Work of Mourning and Its New Audience", College Art Association, Art Journal, Spring 2002
- Bibliography Photopaintings : Atlas and 18. Oktober 1977
- Illustrated Bibliography: Gerhard Richter
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Persondata |
Name |
Richter, Gerhard |
Alternative names |
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Short description |
Artist |
Date of birth |
February 9, 1932 |
Place of birth |
Dresden, Germany |
Date of death |
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Place of death |
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