
Strategic Vandalism: The Legacy of Asger Jorn’s Modification Paintings
Installation view
2019
Stephen Prina
Exquisite Corpse: The Complete Paintings of Manet
248 of 556
Parisienne (Robe à Traine)
Parisienne (Dress with a Train)
1875?
Nationalmuseum, Stockholm
July 18, 2015
PUSH COMES TO LOVE, untitled 1999 - 2016
Ink wash on rag, barrier paper, and offset lithography on paper
Left: 76 x 49.2 inches
Right: 26 x 32.7 inches
Marcel Duchamp
L.H.O.O.Q.
1919/1964
Replica of rectified Readymade by Marcel Duchamp of 1919. Moustache and goatee added in pencil to reproduction of the Mona Lisa; printed lettering obscured in white gouache.
19 x 15 inches
Asger Jorn
Conte du Nord (Northern Count) (Modification)
1959
Oil on canvas on found painting
31.7 x 21.1 inches
Asger Jorn
Brotherhood Above All (Fraternité avant tout)
1962
Oil on canvas (disfiguration/modification)
40.75 x 28.5 inches
Asger Jorn
Ainsi s’Ensor (Out of this World – after Ensor)
1962
Oil on canvas (disfiguration/modification)
23.8 x 16.9 inches
Asger Jorn
The Little Grey Home in the West (Modification)
1959
Oil on canvas on found painting
18.9 x 39.4 inches
Asger Jorn
Le Hollandais Volant (Modification) -The Flying Dutchman
1959
Oil on board over an earlier painting
19.9 x 39.4 inches
David Wojnarowicz
True Myth (Kraft Grape Jelly)
1983
Silkscreen on supermarket poster
34 x 25 inches
David Wojnarowicz
Jean Genet Masturbating in Metteray Prison (London Broil)
1983
Silkscreen on supermarket poster
33.25 x 25 inches
Julian Schnabel
Untitled (BEZ)
2011
Inkjet print, oil, ink, gesso, resin on polyester
106 x 75 inches
Wade Guyton & Stephen Prina
Wade Guyton, Untitled, 2017, Epson UltraChrome HDR on linen
Stephen Prina, PUSH COMES TO LOVE, Untitled, 1999 - 2017
2017
Epson UltraChrome HDR on linen
The entire contents of a can of enamel spray paint
84 x 69 inches
R.H. Quaytman
The Sun, Chapter 1 [Book 1, Fear A]
2001
Silkscreen ink, gesso on wood
20 x 32.4 inches
Ray Johnson
Untitled (Mona Lisa Graphic Print)
n.d.
Collage on illustration board
20 x 15 inches
Ray Johnson
Untitled (Elvis Masked by Vertical Element with Colored Tesserae (Book Cover Series))
6.7.94
Collage on book board
10 x 8 inches
Ray Johnson
Untitled (Dali Crucifixion with Nancy)
ca. 1980
Collage on illustration board
20 x 15 inches
Martin Kippenberger
Modell Interconti
1987
Wood, metal, Gerhard Richter painting from 1973
12.6 x 31.3 x 23.2 inches
Vidya Gastaldon
Healing Painting (Chasse aux esprits)
2015
Oil on vintage framed paint
12.75 x 16 inches
Vidya Gastaldon
Healing Painting (Marine monster)
2016
Oil on vintage framed paint
21.7 x 18.5 inches
Enrico Baj
The Whore with the Ultra-bodies
1959
Oil, collage, padding, glass, and passementerie on readymade canvas
36.2 x 28.7 inches
Enrico Baj
Come Here, You Fair Girl
1959
Oil, collage, padding, glass, decoration, fabric on readymade canvas
35.4 x 41.3 inches
Julian Schnabel
And there was somebody wiping his tears with his flag V
2012
Inkjet print, oil, ink on polyester
118 x 80 inches
Enrico Baj
Ultrabody in Switzerland
1959
Oil, collage, padding on readymade canvas
47.2 x 31.5 inches
Vidya Gastaldon
Healing Painting (Rescue me B)
2015
Oil on vintage framed paint
24.75 x 32.7 inches
Vidya Gastaldon
Healing Painting (Vers de Ciel)
2016
Oil on vintage framed paint
15.75 x 21.7 inches
Jacqueline de Jong
Reine de Sable touched by Pollock
2017
Pigment print on canvas, oil stick, and nepheline gel
35.4 x 24.4 inches
Jacqueline de Jong
7Four7 Returned to the ground
2017
Pigment print on canvas, oil stick, and nepheline gel
35.43 x 24.41 inches
Jacqueline de Jong
Eigenheimer's first encounter
2017
Pigment print on canvas, oil stick, and nepheline gel
35.4 x 24.4 inches
Rachel Harrison
The Classics
2018
Colored pencil, marker, India ink, and gouache over pigmented inkjet print
22 x 17 inches
Rachel Harrison
The Classics
2018
Colored pencil, marker, India ink, and gouache over pigmented inkjet print
17 x 11 inches
If you have old paintings, do not despair. Retain your memories but detourn them so that they correspond with your era. Why reject the old, if one can modernize it? —Asger Jorn
Petzel is pleased to announce Strategic Vandalism: The Legacy of Asger Jorn’s Modifications Paintings. Situated in the context of the first thrift store paintings altered by Danish artist Asger Jorn, this group show of over 30 prominent international artists investigates multifarious appropriation methods spanning from the mid-1960s to the flourishing techniques of the 1980s, up to the present day.
But flashback to Paris, 1959: Asger Jorn exhibits a group of paintings at the prominent Galerie Rive Gauche. Not only has he re-worked these found paintings with his own brush, modifying their respective surfaces, but he also writes a text describing his technique as a recovery of certain iconographic archetypes. Instead of making a mockery of these kitsch paintings, he articulates some of their inherent folk-art values. The exhibition is not well received. However, it has since become legendary. Jorn’s modifications have long been a neglected chapter in the Danish artist’s biography. Yet from today’s perspective these high/low hermaphrodites are recognized by keen-eyed viewers as mirrors reflecting the historicity of modern painting.
Such “Modifications” are a painterly version of “détournement,” a Situationist technique, described in 1956 by Guy Debord and Gil Wolman as the systematic revaluation of “prefabricated aesthetic products.” For Jorn, who co-founded and financially supported the Situationist International, the 1959 Galerie Rive Gauche exhibition, showcased his implementation of a fundamental aesthetic critique in which he appropriates a relatively discredited artistic source as “his” own material, then applies his iconography, and his language to that particular prefabricated model.
Strategic Vandalism: The Legacy of Asger Jorn’s Modification Paintings features works by Enrico Baj, Marcel Duchamp, Max Ernst, Hans-Peter Feldmann, Vidya Gastaldon, Wade Guyton/Stephen Prina, Rachel Harrison, Ray Johnson, Jacqueline de Jong, Asger Jorn, Mike Kelley, Martin Kippenberger, Per Kirkeby, Lee Krasner, Albert Oehlen, Francis Picabia, Stephen Prina, R.H. Quaytman, Arnulf Rainer, Julian Schnabel, Jim Shaw, Gedi Sibony, Alexis Smith, Daniel Spoerri, John Stezaker, Betty Tompkins, and David Wojnarowicz.
A comprehensive book on Strategic Vandalism: The Legacy of Asger Jorn’s Modifications Paintings is forthcoming with texts written and edited by the curators as well as reprinted articles on the subjects of détournement, vandalism, and the relationship between modifications and appropriation art in the late 1970s.
Petzel Gallery is located at 456 West 18th Street New York, NY 10011. Gallery hours are Tuesday through Saturday from 10:00 AM–6:00 PM. For press inquires, please contact Ricky Lee at ricky@petzel.com, or call (212) 680-9467.