B151124170125 012

Therapy Paintings

Rob Pruitt

Dates
24.11.2015 | 30.01.2016
Gallery
London
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Massimo De Carlo gallery is proud to present Rob Pruitt: Therapy Paintings, the third exhibition with the American artist in our London gallery.

“I call this series the Therapy Paintings, because the linear information printed onto each impastoed surface is generated during weekly visits to my therapist. I’ve seen a therapist for a good part of my adult life, and even though I’m quite comfortable on the couch, the act of speaking un-self-consciously about myself had always been difficult, even in this sanctified environment. That changed when I began bringing a pocket-sized notepad and pen with me to my sessions. Letting the pen scribble across the paper automatically was like opening up a valve in my brain, allowing me to speak with greater ease. At the time, I never saw these drawings as anything more than the residue of my progress with my therapist. But then I began to recognize how, by capturing and containing the emotional energy that I was feeling at the time, they could become the basis for a type of abstract painting that I have long wanted to explore.” Rob Pruitt

In the late 1910s, members of the budding Surrealist movement began to experiment with a new method of mark making, initially practiced by Freudian psychoanalysts, called ‘automatic drawing.’ A means of exploring, expressing, and picturing the unseeable character of the human subconscious, the technique involved the surrendering of the mind’s conscious faculties, allowing the hand, instead, to pass over paper with nothing but the arbitrary guidance of the psyche’s whims. Artists would use the method to access repressed memories and emotions, and later depict these privileged recollections in artistic form, conjoining all manner of uncanny images into new, otherworldly compositions.

The pursuit of automatism, and the pure form of expression it untethered, became a crucial artistic activity and objective for many of the most significant artists of the twentieth century, as well as a totemically important concept in the development of Modern Art. Influenced by its initial Surrealist practitioners, such as André Breton and Salvador Dalí, later artists such as Jackson Pollock and Cy Twombly practiced their own versions of automatist expression, creating compositions that, while abstract, still viscerally evinced the respective emotions, personalities, passions, and caprices of their makers.

Rob Pruitt’s series of Therapy Paintings places the artist into conversation with these artistic forebears, adopting their conceit of automatic writing while also, crucially, updating its tenets and technology to suit the present day. Akin to the automatic drawing of a hundred years ago, the designs featured on the impastoed surfaces of the paintings likewise stem from Pruitt’s own hand, their shape determined by his emotions and subconscious. Building upon this legacy, however, Pruitt produces these drawings during his therapy sessions, enhancing the very conditions of automatism, as his drawings stem literally, figuratively, and physically from a space of mental ‘working through’—his own brain and his analyst’s office, simultaneously.

Each with its own shape, its own story, the designs populating Pruitt’s Therapy Paintings come to embody the many emotions felt not only by the artist himself, but by any viewer, any human. They are offered without explication, left for each viewer to interpret. Yet despite this enigmatic presentation, the designs are evocative, familiar. A jagged edge might recall anger; a buoyant mass, elation. The paintings allow the viewer to enter the most private and intimate of spaces, and in an act of utter vulnerability, access the artist’s own psyche alongside him. We are there with him as we view these paintings. We understand him. Uncannily, viewing them, it’s as if he understands us too.

The Artist

Learn more
Rob Pruitt

Rob Pruitt was born in Washington D.C. in 1964 and studied at the Corcoran College of Art and Design in Washington D.C. and Parsons School of Design in New York. He lives and works in New York.


Since the early 1990s, Rob Pruitt’s risk-taking investigations into American popular culture have taken many forms. From his notorious Cocaine Buffet (1998) and glitter portraits of Pandas or the significant Suicide Paintings series, Pruitt’s works are a surreal and extravagant interpretation of the pop world, a kaleidoscopic look towards mass culture by exploring the multiples aspects and the paradoxes of our present time. 


Throughout his career, Rob Pruitt has fine-tuned his ability to express nuanced ideas about culture and society through the re-interpretation of common objects and materials, all filtered through a sense of humour and irony. With his Mask series, the artist continues his pursuit of depicting the complexities of personality and emotions. The facial gestures indeed are cut into the canvas with a razor - destructive and creative at the same time, these gestures are married to an accumulation of gradients, patterns, and prints to create a character

Rob Pruitt Portrait fz Mye F