Dana Schutz
The Island
16 June 2024 – March 2025
The George Economou Collection
80, Kifissias Ave. 15
125 Marousi
Athens, Greece
Dana Schutz: The Island
Curated by Courtney J. Martin
Opening reception Sunday 16 June, 11 a.m. – 8 p.m.
Guided tour with artist Dana Schutz, curator Courtney J. Martin and The George Economou Collection Director, Skarlet Smatana,
Sunday 16 June at 11 a.m. – 12 p.m.
The George Economou Collection is pleased to announce The Island, the first exhibition by American artist Dana Schutz (b. 1976) in Greece.
Across three floors of gallery space, the exhibition will feature salient works spanning more than twenty years, from Schutz’s first mature paintings completed in the early 2000s to a composition finished this year, offering an unparalleled survey of the developments in her style. Throughout her career, the artist’s work has stood in significant contrast to many others of her generation who took up the positions of American abstraction and minimalism or hewed towards the material concerns traditionally associated with sculpture. Her early affinity for figuration—whether single subjects,small, enmeshed groups, or expansive “crowdscapes”—placed her at the forefront of the reemergence of representation in contemporary painting. Schutz’s fantastic images, characterized by intense gestural maneuvers and vigorous colors, feature brushwork and a palette that have evolved in tandem with her work’s increasingly intricate scope and broad scale. The Island brings together a concise group of fifteen paintings and five works on paper that demonstrate how the artist’s skills have shifted and progressed, particularly over the last several years. The convergence of these mediums will shed light on the relationship between her approach to the monochrome format of charcoal drawing and the use of color in her paintings.
The exhibition title is a playful nod to both the show’s location—Greece’s geography comprising thousands of islands—and the visual motif of isolated figures that recurs throughout the artist’s body of work beginning with the earliest paintings on view.In Daughter (2000), a single female figure in three-quarter length appears against a blue background. Schutz has resisted claiming that her images are either self-portraits or depictions of other specific individuals, largely due to the easy assumption that all of her figuration is a self-representation. As a counterpoint, Swimming, Smoking, Crying (2009) presents the head of an anonymous woman enacting the titular trio of verbs to equally comic and dramatic effect. Schutz’s consummate ability to propose but not foreclose the possible meaning of her lone figures is evident in both early works—Sneeze (2001) and Face Eater (2004)—and later ones, such as To Have a Head (2017). Schutz’s cropped bodies within tight framings focuses the viewer’s eye on the way the face manifests action, whether it be the improbability of a head consuming itself or a very ordinary bodily function, like a sneeze.
For some years, Schutz has made works on paper that equal the dynamism of her paintings. The second floor of the exhibition juxtaposes a small group of charcoal drawings, including Sleeping Head (2024), with a group of oil paintings. While these works are not in direct correlation, Schutz’s signature handling of faces and the complex emotions they might convey or inspire is a common touchstone, as evinced by the visages in To Have a Head alongside those in drawings such as The Philosopher and Bowler (both 2015). Their relationships to one another invite a comparison of the ability to render emotion within compositional depth regardless of medium that has become a mainstay of the artist’s style.
Throughout the exhibition, Schutz’s paintings of single figures are in conversation with group scenes. The Island includes examples of the latter from the early 2000s, such as the motley protesters of Fanatics (2005), in addition to the more recent Sea Group (2021), an ascending mass of bodies above a loose pile of bones. In the years that separate the two, Schutz’s paintings point to the artist’s everincreasing understanding of how the individual becomes a part of a group and, in turn, how the group becomes a teeming, volatile crowd. The canvases’ large-scale, rich coloration and rigorously worked surfaces draw the exhibition to a complex close.