Toronto Star

Ordinary film about extraordin­ary artist

- MURRAY WHYTE

Gerhard Richter Painting

1/2 (out of 4) A documentar­y about famous artist. Written and directed by Corinna Belz. 97 minutes. Opens March 30 at TIFF Bell Lightbox. PG

About two-thirds of the way through the interminab­le Gerhard

Richter Painting, the titular subject himself passively balks at the prospect of being further recorded at work in his studio. Painting under observatio­n, he grumps, is “worse than being in the hospital.”

If it feels that way for you, Gerhard, imagine what it’s like for your audience. Over its nearly two hours of drab, dull-as-dishwater footage of the politely taciturn painter quietly going about his business, director Corinna Belz tries mightily to offer a naturalist­ic portrait of the artist that many consider to be the greatest painter of his generation.

Early on, though, Belz’s conceit for the film wears thin. Granted access to Richter’s studio in Cologne, Germany for the better part of summer 2009, Belz assumes a fly-on-thewall approach, which might work well if the subject is gregarious, dynamic or engaging.

Richter, alas, is none of these things. Introspect­ive and near-mute — with, I’ll allow, a bone-dry sense of humour that surfaces infrequent­ly, usually to address the absurdity of a camera pointed at him — the film unblinking­ly casts long glances on the 80-year-old artist at work, mostly on a pair of gaudy abstract paintings Richter himself is both puzzled and troubled by.

The artist slaps a base coat of yellow on canvas with a thick, broad brush, like a house painter, adding swaths of blue, then red, before taking a huge squeegee to the surface, smearing the paint into decadent ruin. “It’s not working,” he shrugs. Belz gamely tries to have Richter explain why. Richter slumps to the wall, wordless. “We should talk about the film now,” he says, and starts laughing.

These kinds of unresolvab­le interactio­ns are standard fare for Ger

hard Richter Painting. It becomes clear that Belz has set the quixotic task for herself of trying to contain, or at least describe, the ineffable — the torturous process Richter goes through to create paintings that match his standard, a standard that has establishe­d him as both a first-order master painter, and a multimilli­on-dollar seller. (Last year, his works sold at auction for a total of more than $200 million, more than any other living artist, and more than works by household names Mark Rothko, Claude Monet and Alberto Giacometti combined.) Richter is kindly, but unengaged in Belz’s process, far too committed to his own. This, one would think, would lead a documentar­ian to flesh out of her subject’s life, history and relationsh­ips. But Belz does none of this. The only interviews beyond Richter himself are incidental chats with his assistants, who mirror his oblique obfuscatio­ns, and a quick conversati­on with Richter’s New York dealer, Marian Goodman, who explains how she saw a particular genius in Richter’s work in the ’80s, when it was lumped in with so-called Neo-expression­ists like Julian Schnabel. Goodman’s instinct was right. Richter’s work is nothing short of extraordin­ary, from his early works painting hauntingly indistinct portraits of murder victims from news- paper photograph­s on through his formal engagement­s with classical subjects like still-lifes and portraitur­e. Each time, Richter explored the strange aesthetic borderland between crisp photograph­ic representa­tion and the interpreti­ve looseness of painting, until he arrived at pure abstractio­n, a more recent fascinatio­n. Belz gives us almost none of this. So focused is she on the process of these two paintings, on the present moment, we get only the briefest snippets of Richter’s life, and how he arrived at where he is. He was born in Dresden in 1932, survived the Allied razing of the city as a child, and slipped across the border into the West a few years before the Berlin Wall was sealed, in 1961. His fascinatio­n with darkness, despair, brutality both personal and political (his Uncle Rudy, a blurred portrait of Nazi SS soldier, remains one of the most haunting images of the 20th century) is touched on hardly at all by Belz, who busies herself with trying to catch lightning in a bottle — a struggle Richter has yet to resolve for himself.

I have no doubt the Richter we see on film is true to life, though there is depth to be gleaned. In his very good, thoroughly researched and multi-sourced recent biography of Richter, Dietmar Elger manages to glean from him that “saying I was indifferen­t was an attempt at selfprotec­tion . . . but I don’t mind admitting now that I painted things that mattered to me personally —the tragic types, the murders, the suicides, the failures and so on.”

No such statement ever emerges from Belz’s film. Deflecting her queries with oblique, confused suggestion­s of unknowing — Richter maintains he doesn’t understand the quality of what makes a successful work, only that he knows when he sees it — we end up with less a portrait of Richter than a silhouette. Given the extraordin­ary treatment his work has been given in the past year — Panorama, a survey of 50 years of Richter’s work, launched at the Tate Modern last fall; it was recently in Berlin, and will be at the Centre Pompidou in Paris by summer — this film might have been an opportunit­y to start thinking about legacy.

Instead, Belz appears to build her film around an archival interview with Richter from 1966, which she presents early on. “To talk about painting is not only difficult but perhaps pointless, too,” the 30somethin­g Richter says. “You can only express in words what words are capable of expressing.”

Now you tell me.

 ?? TOBIAS SCHWARZ/REUTERS ?? A man looks at the work Juni by German artist Gerhard Richter at his recent exhibition in Berlin.
TOBIAS SCHWARZ/REUTERS A man looks at the work Juni by German artist Gerhard Richter at his recent exhibition in Berlin.

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