The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Abstract artist Scully exhibits at Atheneum

- For more informatio­n, call (860) 278-2670 or visit www.thewadswor­th.org. WADSWORTH ATHENEUM

HARTFORD — The acclaimed Landline series represents a dramatic shift in the work of one of today’s most important abstract artists, Sean Scully. In Scully’s words, “I was always looking at the horizon line-at the way the end of the sea touches the beginning of the sky, the way the sky presses down on the sea and the way that line, that relationsh­ip, is painted.” The Landline series stems from a group of 1999 seascape photograph­s taken by Scully in Norfolk, England. He went on to create paintings, sculptures, pastels, drawings, and prints featuring horizontal stripes inspired by the bands of land, water, and sky captured in the photograph­s. The Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art brings Sean Scully: Landline to New England Feb. 23 to May 19.

A large-scale, 30-layer Stack sculpture, the first public sculpture by Scully on view at an American museum, was installed on the Wadsworth Atheneum’s Main Street lawn in July 2018 in anticipati­on of the exhibition. Sean Scully: Landline is the first show to feature the full scope of work from the Landline series in the United States after its premiere at the 56th Venice Biennale. “The Wadsworth has long been a champion of abstract art and artists,” says Thomas J. Loughman, Director and CEO of the Wadsworth. “Sean Scully translates the lived world into art. This is a rare opportunit­y for our visitors to immerse themselves in this powerfully moving series that communicat­es a range of experience­s and emotions, through a surprising­ly broad range of media and scale.”

Known for combining the geometry of European concrete art with the etherealit­y of American abstractio­n, Scully’s thick, gestural brushstrok­es evoke the energy and beauty of the natural world in the Landline works. Unlike his other series, such as Wall of Light and Doric both inspired by architectu­re, the works in Landline are largely inspired by the moments Scully spent looking out to sea. They are a response to his observatio­n of the layers of the world pressed into the space in front of him in those moments. These layers form the visual stacks that have come to characteri­ze the drawings, sculptures, and paintings of the Landline series. The expressive and unconstrai­ned bands of color reach beyond abstractio­n and into the sublime, where the contours of landscapes unfold to reveal the physical and emotional dimensions of experience, trauma, and memory.

“Scully relates the Landline works to his personal immigrant experience,” said Patricia Hickson, the Wadsworth’s Emily Hall Tremaine Curator of Contempora­ry Art. “As a young man in the United Kingdom, looking out at the Atlantic Ocean, he had a dream to move to America and succeed in New York as an artist. With the Landline series Scully contemplat­es those early years, a long career, and a lifetime of landscapes encountere­d in travels worldwide.”

In a career that began in the mid-1960s, Scully has risen to internatio­nal prominence, with work in major museum collection­s worldwide. The Wadsworth has a long relationsh­ip with Scully, first acquiring his major work Red and Pink Robe in 2009 not long after the painting was completed. In 2011 he gave The Emily Hall Tremaine Lecture in Contempora­ry Art and also discussed a number of favorite works from the collection in the museum’s Artists on Art mobile audio tour including Gustave Courbet’s, The Shore at Trouville: Sunset Effect, 1866 and Francisco de Zurbarán’s Saint Serapion, 1626. Scully will be recording new audio content for a mobile tour about land, sea, and skyscapes that will include art from the broader museum collection as well as his own.

Sean Scully: Landline traces the series as realized over the past decade in nearly 50 oil paintings, pastels, watercolor­s, prints, and three aluminum Stack sculptures as well as the earlier photograph­s and works on paper where Scully first interrogat­ed the idea. The exhibition anticipate­s a series of internatio­nal shows including, Sea Star: Sean Scully at the National Gallery of Art, London, UK, April 15 to August 11; Sean Scully: Human, San Giorgio Maggiore, Venice Biennale, Venice, Italy, May 11 to Nov. 24; and Sean Scully - Eleuthera, Albertina, Vienna, Austria, June 6 - Sept. 8. Organized by the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Smithsonia­n Institutio­n in associatio­n with the Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art, Sean Scully: Landline is the first monographi­c exhibition of work by a living artist that the Wadsworth has presented since 2011. The Landline exhibition is accompanie­d by an illustrate­d catalogue, featuring an essay by Patricia Hickson, the Wadsworth’s Emily Hall Tremaine Curator of Contempora­ry Art, an interview of Scully by Stéphane Aquin, the Hirshhorn’s Chief Curator, and original poetry by Kelly Grovier, inspired by Landline and written for this publicatio­n.

Sean Scully lives and works in New York, London, Berlin, and the Bavarian countrysid­e. Current exhibition­s include Beyond Borders at the Villa Empain-Foundation Boghossian, Brussels, Belgium through February 24, 2019 and two sculptures Crate of Air, 2018 and Wall Dale Cubed, 2018 on view at the Yorkshire Sculpture Park, Wakefield, UK, through 2019.

He recently became one of the only Western artists to have had a career-length retrospect­ive exhibition in China (his 2014 exhibition of over 100 paintings traveled from Shanghai Himalayas Art Museum to the Central Academy of Fine Arts in Beijing), and he was recently the subject of solo exhibition­s in São Paulo, Brazil, at the Pinacoteca do Estado; in Neuhaus, Austria, in the inaugural show at the new Museum Liaunig; in Venice, Italy, during the 2015 Biennale; in Dublin, where the National Gallery of Ireland exhibited five major paintings from the collection of 40 works held by the Tate in London, as well as his recent photograph­s; and in Cork, Ireland, at the Crawford Art Gallery.

He is the recipient of the 2016 Harper’s Bazaar Art Internatio­nal Artist of the Year Award, has twice been shortliste­d for the Tate’s Turner Prize and his works are included in the permanent collection­s of nearly every major North American museum, including the Art Gallery of Ontario, Art Institute of Chicago, Broad Art Foundation, High Museum of Art, the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Metropolit­an Museum of Art, Museum of Modern Art, National Gallery of Art, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum and Whitney Museum of American Art, among many others.

Tours of Sean Scully: Landline and landscapes from the collection are offered on Saturdays and Sundays at 2:30 p.m. from March 2 to May 19. A Gallery Talk with curator Patricia Hickson will be held on Feb. 24 at 1 p.m. “Sunday Serenades Chamber Music Series: Land Sea Sky,” a delightful and elegant soundscape of music complement­ing the exhibition, will take place Feb. 24 at 2 p.m. “Art Talk: Sean Scully and Patricia Hickson in Conversati­on” takes place on March 11 at 6 p.m. following a reception at 5 p.m.

Founded in 1842, the Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art is located at 600 Main Street in Hartford. Hours: Wednesday to Friday: 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Saturday and Sunday: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Admission: $5-15; discounts for members, students and seniors. Free admission for Hartford residents with Wadsworth Welcome registrati­on. Free “happy hour” admission 4 to 5 p.m.

 ?? Contribute­d photos ?? From left: Sean Scully, Landline 5.20.15, 2015, Watercolor on paper. Private collection. Sean Scully. Photograph­ed by Frank Hutter. Center: Sean Scully, 30 (installati­on), 2018, Aluminum and automotive paint. Sean Scully. Courtesy of the artist. Right: Sean Scully, Landline Orient, 2017, Oil on aluminum. Private collection. Sean Scully. Photograph­ed by Robert Bean.
Contribute­d photos From left: Sean Scully, Landline 5.20.15, 2015, Watercolor on paper. Private collection. Sean Scully. Photograph­ed by Frank Hutter. Center: Sean Scully, 30 (installati­on), 2018, Aluminum and automotive paint. Sean Scully. Courtesy of the artist. Right: Sean Scully, Landline Orient, 2017, Oil on aluminum. Private collection. Sean Scully. Photograph­ed by Robert Bean.

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