![The Nature of Mark Grotjahn](https://gagosian.com/media/images/quarterly/essay-nature-mark-grotjahn/7gCYKflVZEbS_300x300.jpg)
The Nature of Mark Grotjahn
Michael Auping writes about the origins of Mark Grotjahn’s Capri paintings and their relationship with nature and landscape.
Gagosian is pleased to announce Backcountry, an exhibition of new paintings by Mark Grotjahn opening in Gstaad on February 13, 2023. The works on view represent a continuation of those in Grotjahn’s identically titled 2022 exhibition at Gagosian London.
In his paintings, sculptures, and works on paper, Grotjahn interweaves various modes of abstraction, applying an expansive vocabulary of motifs and techniques to the investigation of color, perspective, seriality, and the sublime. In Backcountry, he continues to draw inspiration from rural landscapes and his ski touring and fly-fishing adventures in the backcountry of western Colorado. In several works, he uses white paint—suggesting, perhaps, the feeling of a snowy mountain descent—while darker-toned compositions allude to nocturnal ventures. The scale of the works places them in a direct, visceral relationship to the bodies of both painter and viewer, conveying the unique atmosphere of their inspiration and a sense of awe at the overwhelming grandeur of the natural world.
Rather than aiming to capture a sense of place, Grotjahn’s project here is to communicate the essence of a fleeting but powerful experience, both in nature and in the studio. Through bold, expressive movements and strong carving strokes, the artist prompts the paintings to embody the feeling of his physical actions. The results are emotionally charged and ripe with layers and textures. Grotjahn often disrupts the surfaces of these works with small rolls of paint created from excess impasto—bulbous staccatos within the dense arcs of color.