Keith Haring

Mar 28, 2019 - May 22, 2019

Van de Weghe is pleased to present an exhibition of paintings by Keith Haring (1958-1990), an artist whose bold, graphic line, vivid color, and exuberant imagery is instantly recognizable. Haring’s work celebrates human existence while confronting weighty themes including violence, power, and the dehumanizing effect of technology. Haring tragically died of AIDS in 1990.

Haring moved from Kutztown, PA to New York to study painting at the School of Visual Arts in 1978. In New York, he found inspiration in the expanding field of art at the time: installation, performance, graffiti art and video in non-conventional or alternative venues like the East Village Club 57 and Mudd Club. In 1980, while at SVA, Haring began making his famous Subway Drawings: techno-primitive Pop imagery in white chalk on black paper pasted alongside paid advertising on platforms. This way of working shaped Haring’s practice going forward: the act of drawing was a performance of sorts for an audience of passers-by, done quickly and decisively due to the risk of arrest.

Haring began using traditional canvas circa 1985 and the works on the view date from 1985- 1987. Haring had an abiding interest in art history, admiring the work of Pierre Alechinsky, Stuart Davis, Jean Dubuffet and Jackson Pollock. He was interested in the basic structures of art that he felt are universal and timeless. Haring’s iconic depiction of the figure, hieroglyph-like, is a prime example of this, representative of both the individual and the whole of humanity. In Untitled, 1986 a sizzling platter of these figures is hoisted overhead by a larger central figure emblazoned with an enigmatic red “X.” Haring taps into the legacy of symbols and archetypes that lie in the collective unconscious. Untitled (Knokke #3), 1987, was made during the artist’s time in Belgium when he was invited by Roger Nellens to paint a mural at the Knokke Casino. The figure is a kind of sea creature with both human and mythical characteristics; its features seem to slide around its face as it lowers a fish into its mouth from above.



Van de Weghe is pleased to present an exhibition of paintings by Keith Haring (1958-1990), an artist whose bold, graphic line, vivid color, and exuberant imagery is instantly recognizable. Haring’s work celebrates human existence while confronting weighty themes including violence, power, and the dehumanizing effect of technology. Haring tragically died of AIDS in 1990.

Haring moved from Kutztown, PA to New York to study painting at the School of Visual Arts in 1978. In New York, he found inspiration in the expanding field of art at the time: installation, performance, graffiti art and video in non-conventional or alternative venues like the East Village Club 57 and Mudd Club. In 1980, while at SVA, Haring began making his famous Subway Drawings: techno-primitive Pop imagery in white chalk on black paper pasted alongside paid advertising on platforms. This way of working shaped Haring’s practice going forward: the act of drawing was a performance of sorts for an audience of passers-by, done quickly and decisively due to the risk of arrest.

Haring began using traditional canvas circa 1985 and the works on the view date from 1985- 1987. Haring had an abiding interest in art history, admiring the work of Pierre Alechinsky, Stuart Davis, Jean Dubuffet and Jackson Pollock. He was interested in the basic structures of art that he felt are universal and timeless. Haring’s iconic depiction of the figure, hieroglyph-like, is a prime example of this, representative of both the individual and the whole of humanity. In Untitled, 1986 a sizzling platter of these figures is hoisted overhead by a larger central figure emblazoned with an enigmatic red “X.” Haring taps into the legacy of symbols and archetypes that lie in the collective unconscious. Untitled (Knokke #3), 1987, was made during the artist’s time in Belgium when he was invited by Roger Nellens to paint a mural at the Knokke Casino. The figure is a kind of sea creature with both human and mythical characteristics; its features seem to slide around its face as it lowers a fish into its mouth from above.



Artists on show

Contact details

1018 Madison Avenue Upper East Side - New York, NY, USA 10075
Sign in to MutualArt.com