Susanne Kuhn: Museum of Contemporary Art Denver.
Auslander, Philip
The women in Susanne Kuhn's large-scale paintings are alone
and isolated despite the crowdedness of their settings, which are
frequently borrowed from the history of art. In Melanie-Melancholy,
2007, for example, a twenty-first-century woman sits in a courtyard on
loan from Fra Filippo Lippi's fifteenth-century Madonna and Child with Stories of the Life of St. Anne; but whereas Lippi's Madonna
occupies center stage and looks demurely at the viewer, Kuhn's
subject turns to her right and gazes off into the distance. She is
partly obscured by spindly, broken tree limbs and schematic tufts of
overgrown grass. While Lippi's painting is a narrative
space--figures enact scenes from the life of Mary's mother in the
open rooms and alcoves behind her--Melanie-Melancholy is full of stuff,
rather than people, including furniture, a toy figurine, toy castles,
and a garment draped over the table behind the title character. These
allusive objects may evoke absent others, but it is clearly not
Kuhn's intention to provide a legible narrative context for the
woman, who remains remote, lost in her own thoughts.
Kuhn uses compartmentalized compositions based in the conventions
of both Flemish Renaissance painting and Japanese woodblock prints to
isolate her female figures. The same woman appears on the extreme right
sides of both Katja's Dream, 2007, and Katja-Melancholy, 2007. In
the former, she reposes, though she is not sleeping, on a canopy bed
decorated with gothic filigree. In the latter, she sits on a bench in a
traditional Japanese building. In both cases, she is trained by
structures that are open but that confine her to the margins. In these
paintings, as in Melanie-Melancholy, interior and exterior spaces
overlap in labyrinthine compositions that seem to entrap the women. In
Katja's Dream, the checkerboard floor, reminiscent of those in
Flemish paintings, extends so far that it becomes an exterior walkway.
Although it might suggest a Japanese garden, the setting of
Katja-Melancholy resembles a painting or backdrop more than it does the
outdoors. In scale these paintings are expansive, but the worlds they
depict are dense and claustrophobic.
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Still Life with Books, 2008, is a reworking of Jan van Eyck's
The Arnolfini Marriage, without the Arnolfinis. In their absence,
previously obscured features of the room become visible: The bed, with
its pendulous red drapery, dominates, and we also have a clear view of
the two chairs, one lower than the other, against the back wall. The
seats, cushioned in van Eyck's work, are bare wood here, as if they
have been stripped. The Arnolfini Wedding is famous for its multiple
symbolic objects (e.g., the candelabra], which have prompted endless
scholarly interpretation. These objects are all missing from Kuhn's
version, the sense of absence enhanced by the conspicuous emptiness of
the sideboard's compartments. It is as if the Arnolfinis moved out
long ago, and subsequent occupants left behind their own emblematic
items: toy knights, an oriental rug, two art books, and a distinctly
modern painting of a moody male figure partially covered by an open
window shutter. Kuhn renders the scene in flat planes of color: Van Eyck
meets ikea. She draws successfully on historical tropes of
representation to depict a contemporary world that breeds alienation and
anomie.