PRESS PREVIEW
A press preview of the exhibition is scheduled for Tuesday, February 28, 2006,
at 10 am. For more information or to RSVP, please call 202.639.1867
or email pr@corcoran.org.
The Corcoran Gallery of Art will present the exhibition Robert Bechtle:
A Retrospective, the first full–scale survey of the work of this important San Francisco-based
artist. Organized by Janet Bishop, curator of painting and sculpture at the San
Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA), the exhibition features more than 90
works – paintings, watercolors and drawings that trace his career from
his early photo-based pieces of the 1960s to his most recent works. Since his
work emerged in the context of New or Photorealism in the late 1960s, Bechtle’s
family genre scenes, streetscapes and images of cars have become icons of middle–class
American culture. The exhibition is the most comprehensive presentation of the
artist’s work to date and will be on view from March 4 through June 4,
2006 at the Corcoran – the last and only East coast venue for the tour.
Despite widespread exposure in the context of Photorealism and inclusion in
important surveys of American art in the United States and abroad, Bechtle’s
work had not been the subject of a major museum show until it was recently
displayed at the SFMOMA and the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth in 2005. This
exhibition spans the artist’s 40–year career with
work drawn from local, national and international collections. Accompanying
the show is a major publication with color plates of all of the works in the
exhibition and essays by Bishop, painter and art historian Jonathan Weinberg,
Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth chief curator Michael Auping, SFMOMA curatorial
associate Joshua Shirkey, and Los Angeles-based artist Charles Ray.
“Bechtle’s extraordinary talent lies predominantly in what he
can do with paint, rather than in what he can do with likenesses or photographs,
though all of these elements figure into his accomplishments,” notes
Jonathan P. Binstock, a coordinator for the Corcoran presentation and Corcoran
Curator of Contemporary Art. “While his pictures look terrific in reproduction,
they are altogether different in person, when one can experience the finesse
of his painterly application and of his unique touch. Nothing looks quite like
his creations – they are transporting.”
Bechtle was born in 1932 in San Francisco and raised across the Bay in Alameda.
He studied graphic design and painting at the California College of Arts and
Crafts in Oakland, earning his BFA in 1954 and MFA in 1958. He began painting
seriously in the early 1960s, finding his own voice through a tightly controlled
realism that was distinct from the expressionistic paint-handling characteristic
of Bay Area Figurative art – the then dominant mode of expression among
his local peers and predecessors. Bechtle’s interest in painting elements
from his immediate surroundings as they actually looked, rather than an interpretation
of how they looked, led to his use of black and white photographs in 1964 as
studio aids.
The following year, Bechtle began taking slides for color reference which
he projected directly onto canvas. After outlining the contours of the forms
in pencil, the artist then built up the work with paint to establish the presence
of form, light and color. The photographs provided Bechtle with the beginning
structure for the painting, which allowed him to make artistic changes in the
content and composition of the work as he painted.
Bechtle’s paintings emphasize Northern California residential neighborhoods – replete
with stucco houses, repetitive rows of palm trees and the ubiquitous parked
car. Bechtle’s preference for wide, empty spaces; his flat, sun–bleached
palette; and his detached mode of recording detail impart a certain sense of
alienation to his frequently banal subjects. The comprehensive exhibition includes
works, such as the extraordinary ’60 T-Bird, 1967-68, an iconic
image from Bechtle’s early group of car images. This painting features
the artist’s brother standing proudly beside his virtually perfect white
coupe with gray tires appointed with white stripes.
The Retrospective also includes the painting, Alameda Gran Torino, 1974, a
deadpan image of a wood-paneled station wagon, which is considered to be one
of Bechtle’s finest works. Other early works in the exhibition include, ’56
Chrysler, 1965, set in front of the artist’s mother’s Alameda home;
and ’46 Chevy, 1965, featuring Bechtle’s brother sitting in the
artist’s own convertible, which is the first piece to make use of a snapshot-like
aesthetic – a major direction of his work for the duration of the 1960s
and 1970s. Major family genre scenes include, Roses, 1973, featuring a trio
of women on a suburban sidewalk and Agua Caliente Nova, 1975, giving an honest
view of the family experience of the Western landscape. The exhibition also
includes, Frisco Nova, 1979, an important bridge between the artist’s
snapshot-inspired paintings of cars and people to his more recent emphasis
on landscape.
The exhibition concludes with San Francisco residential landscapes, including
the dramatic Sunset Intersection-40th and Vicente, 1989; Texas
Street Intersection,
2000; and the companion paintings, Mariposa I and Mariposa II, 1999 and 2000,
which make use of the artist’s hilly Potrero Hill neighborhood; and Jetta,
2003, showing the artist’s recent interest in depicting covered cars.
Bechtle’s recent work is also represented by major interiors – both
self-portraits and double portraits of himself with his wife, art historian
Whitney Chadwick, in such pieces as, Broome Street Zenith, 1987, and Potrero
Table, 1994.
EXHIBITION ORGANIZATION
Robert Bechtle: A Retrospective is organized by the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. The exhibition is supported by the SFMOMA's Evelyn D. Haas Exhibition Fund, the Bernard Osher Foundation, the Estates of Emily and Lewis S. Callaghan, the Kadima Foundation and the Richard Florsheim Art Fund. The Corcoran's presentation of Robert Bechtle: A Retrospective is generously supported by the Lannan Foundation.
PRESS PREVIEW
A press preview of the exhibition is scheduled for Tuesday, February 28, 2006,
at 10 am. For more information or to RSVP, please call 202.639.1867
or email pr@corcoran.org.
PRESS IMAGES
High-resolution digital images are available to press via the Corcoran’s
FTP site www.corcoran.org/press. To register for image use, please visit the
press section of the Web site and hit “Press Image Login.” After
providing contact information, an automated e-mail will be sent back with user
name, password information and download instructions. For questions or problems,
please contact the Corcoran Communications Office at Pr@corcoran.org or
202.639.1867.
ABOUT THE CORCORAN GALLERY OF ART
The Corcoran Gallery of Art was founded in 1869 as Washington’s first
museum of art. It is a privately funded institution incorporating both a museum
and college of art and design. As one of America’s oldest art institutions,
the Corcoran is known internationally for its distinguished collection of historical
and modern American art, as well as European painting, sculpture, photography
and decorative arts.
Founded in 1890, the Corcoran College of Art + Design
is Washington’s
only 4-year college of art and design. The college currently offers four-year
Bachelor of Fine Arts (BFA) degree programs; two-year Associate of Fine Arts
(AFA) degree programs; Master of Arts (MA) degree programs in Interior Design,
the History of Decorative Arts and Teaching; and a Continuing Education program
encompassing more than 250 courses and 14 certificate programs for part-time
adult students; as well as year-round classes designed especially for children
and teens.
The Corcoran Gallery of Art is located at New York Avenue and 17th
Street, NW, Washington, D.C. and is open Wednesdays – Sundays from 10
am – 5
pm and until 9 pm on Thursdays. The museum is closed on Mondays and Tuesdays,
but open on holiday Mondays. Admission to the Corcoran is: $8.00 for adults;
$6.00 for senior citizens and U.S. military personnel; $4 for students with
current ID and $3 for Member guests. Admission is always free for Members and
children under 12. Admission is “pay as you wish” on Thursdays
after 5 pm. For information about the museum, call 202.639.1700. For information
about the college, call 202.639.1800.
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CONTACT: Kristin Guiter Manager of Media Relations (202) 639-1867, kguiter@corcoran.org

Media Resources:
Curator Jonathan P. Binstock
Advance Exhibition Schedule
Archived
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