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Peter Saul: Murder in the Kitchen, Early Works

"Rich Guy/Drive In", 1965 Pastel, colored pencil, ink on board 40 x 51 inches 101.6 x 129.5 cm SAUZ 1965/003
Peter Saul”Rich Guy/Drive In”, 1965 Pastel, colored pencil, ink on board 40 x 51 inches 101.6 x 129.5 cm Courtesy of Michael Werner

Peter Saul: Murder in the Kitchen, Early Works, features paintings and works on paper created from 1959 to 1966. The exhibition charts the artist’s development as he emerges as one of the most original voices in 20th century American painting.

"Golden Gate", 1966 Oil, acrylic, marker, pen on canvas 49 x 70 inches 124.5 x 178 cm
Peter Saul “Golden Gate”, 1966 Oil, acrylic, marker, pen on canvas 49 x 70 inches 124.5 x 178 cm Courtesy of Michael Werner

Peter Saul (b. 1934) has a career that spans over 60 years and a body of work that is difficult to categorize, particularly since he never wanted to belong to any artistic group. After graduating from art school in 1956, Saul moved to Europe, leaving an oppressive America steeped in McCarthyism with the intention of never returning. While abroad, Saul followed what he thought was expected of an artist and painted abstract works, but ultimately he wanted to create a signature style of his own.

Arriving in Paris in 1958, the artist began to incorporate into his paintings representational images of the America of his childhood: Superman, Donald Duck, Mickey Mouse, capital punishment, and the comic strip Crime Does Not Pay. He sought out further American imagery from publications like LIFE, TIME, and MAD Magazine, which were difficult to obtain in Europe. Using these distinctive visuals in his painting was a revelation to him. Discussing his style from that time, Saul explains the work possessed an “obvious narrative that surprised me because usually I did not know what would happen next.”

Away from America, where artists started making minimalist work, Saul created narrative-driven paintings that critiqued American culture. By the time he moved back to America in 1964, the narrative was more defined, his figures more grotesque, and his colors more garish. His signature, innovative style was born from his ability to allow the painting to speak for itself. “I had to divorce myself from the picture,” Saul explains, “and say to my picture: ‘you can be anything you want: you can be fascist, you can be cruel, you can be any damn thing, just do it.'”

Murder in the Kitchen, Early Works includes Saul’s most iconic work from this time. The paintings and drawings on view feature crimes, executions, and Superman, all recurring scenes and figures in Saul’s early work. Also highlighted will be paintings from his famous Ice Box series as well as an early painting from his Vietnam series. The exhibition will be accompanied by a catalogue and includes loans from private and public collections. The exhibition amplifies Peter Saul’s retrospective at the New Museum, Peter Saul: Crime and Punishment, now extended through January 3, 2021.

Electric Chair", 1964 Oil on canvas 66 1/2 x 58 3/4 inches 169 x 149 cm SAU 1964/011
Peter Saul Electric Chair”, 1964 Oil on canvas 66 1/2 x 58 3/4 inches 169 x 149 cm Courtesy of Michael Werner

Since his first solo exhibition, in Chicago in 1961, Peter Saul has exhibited his work throughout the United States and internationally. His works are found in numerous museum collections worldwide, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; Museum of Modern Art, New York; Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; Art Institute of Chicago; Carnegie Museum, Pittsburgh; Centre Pompidou, Paris; Los Angeles County Museum of Art; Moderna Museet, Stockholm; Museum Ludwig, Cologne; and Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam. Aside from the retrospective at the New Museum, recent important exhibitions include Peter Saul at the Schirn Kunsthalle in Frankfurt as well as Pop, Funk, Bad Painting and More at Les Abattoirs in Toulouse and Le Delta in Namur.

Peter Saul: Murder in the Kitchen, Early Works, Michael Werner New York on September 17th – November 14th www.michaelwerner.com

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