
Neo-Expressionism - III
Sandro Chia
b.1946
Sandro Chia
(born 20 April 1946) is an Italian painter and sculptor. In the late 1970s and early 1980s he was, with Francesco Clemente, Enzo Cucchi, Nicola De Maria, and Mimmo Paladino, a principal member of the Italian Neo-Expressionist movement which was baptised Transavanguardia by Achille Bonito Oliva.
Chia was born in Florence, in Tuscany in central Italy, on 20 April 1946. He studied at the Istituto d'Arte di Firenze from 1962 to 1967, and then, until 1969, at the Accademia di Belle Arti di Firenze. He then travelled in Europe, in Turkey and in India. He settled in Rome in 1970, and began to show work in the following year. He spent the winter of 1980–1981 in Mönchengladbach, in Nordrhein-Westfalen in West Germany, on a study grant. Later that year he moved to New York in the United States, where he lived for more than twenty years. In 1984–1985 he taught at the School of Visual Arts in Manhattan.
Chia's early work tended towards Conceptualism, but from the mid-1970s he began to turn towards more a figurative approach. In June 1979 Paul Maenz showed work by Chia, Francesco Clemente, Enzo Cucchi, Nicola De Maria and Mimmo Paladino at his gallery in Cologne, in Germany. In an article in Flash Art in the same year, the critic Achille Bonito Oliva characterised the group as a new art movement, which he called "Transavanguardia".

Sandro Chia

Sandro Chia

Sandro Chia

Sandro Chia

Sandro Chia

Sandro Chia

Sandro Chia

Sandro Chia

Sandro Chia

Sandro Chia

Sandro Chia

Sandro Chia

Sandro Chia

Sandro Chia

Sandro Chia

Sandro Chia

Sandro Chia

Sandro Chia

Sandro Chia
Gerard Garouste
b.1946

Gérard Garouste
Orion et Cédalion, 1983
Gerard Garouste
(born 10 March 1946) is a French contemporary artist having the primary field of work as visual and performative domain.
Since 1979, he has lived and worked in Marcilly-sur-Eure in Normandy, where he founded an educational and social action group to help children with art called La Source.
He has been married to designer Élisabeth Garouste since 1969.
In 1980, he had his first art show at the Durand-Dessert gallery, showing figurative, mythological, and allegorical paintings. This show brought him national recognition, and then, international. His first international show took place in New York City in 1982 at the Holly Solomon Gallery. Others followed, such as those at the Leo Castelli Gallery in New York and in Sperone, Italy. He was the only French artist to be invited to the Zeitgeist at Berlin. Institutional recognition came in 1987, at the CAPC of Bordeaux (Centre d'arts plastiques contemporains de Bordeaux), where he presented a combination of oils on canvas and acrylics on homespun, and then at the Fondation Cartier.
Garouste has executed works and decorations for various endeavors: paintings for the Élysée Palace, sculptures for Évry Cathedral, the ceiling of the theater at Namur, and for the church of Notre-Dame de Talant, stained glass. In 1989, he did the curtain for the Théâtre du Châtelet.
An important step for Garouste was the founding in 1991 of the association The Source, which sets itself the task of helping culturally underprivileged young people to achieve personal development through artistic expression.
He received an order in 1996 for a monumental work for the National Library of France mixing painting and wrought iron. Sculpture and engraving were attracting him more and more, as well as illustration for all sorts of writings, from Don Quixote to the Haggadah.

Gérard Garouste

Gérard Garouste, Le Masque de chien (Autoportrait)

Gérard Garouste,
Orion le classique, Orion l’Indien (huile sur toile)
1981-82, Paris, MNAM, Centre Pompidou

Gérard Garouste
Alma

Gérard Garouste
Sainte Thérèse
1983

Gérard Garouste
Untitled

Gérard Garouste
La barque et le pêcheur, le pantalon rouge
(1984)

Gérard Garouste
The Other and the Matador

Gérard Garouste
Balaam et le sous-main

Gérard Garouste
Lilith voilée

Gérard Garouste
Esther - Chapitre II

Gérard Garouste
Scenes of a Room, 1983

Gérard Garouste
Don Quichotte

Gérard Garouste
Untitled

Gérard Garouste
Zeugma. Diane et Actéon

Gérard Garouste
Sourcier

Gérard Garouste
Raba Bar Bar’ Hana

Gérard Garouste
La ville mensonge

Gérard Garouste
Honi the carob

Gérard Garouste
Mona la colombe

Gérard Garouste
L'apiculteur et les Indiens

Gérard Garouste
Portfolio

Gérard Garouste –
Le vol du grison

Gérard Garouste
“Samaritaine”
Rolf Lukaschewski
b.1947

Rolf Lukaschewski
(born December 1, 1947 in Schleswig) is a German artist and painter of Neo-Expressionism and Pop Art.
From 1968 to 1978 he studied painting and sculpture in Cologne at the University of Applied Sciences for Art & Design under professors Dieter Kraemer (painting) and Karl Burgeff (sculpture). He was able to complete his academic training as a master student with distinction. Rolf Lukaschewski made a name for himself with his large-format, expressive, socially and time-critical paintings, such as: B. his Opera Ball triptych, his international position in 21st century painting. He lives and works mainly in Montreux, Switzerland, on Lake Geneva.

Rolf Lukaschewski

Rolf Lukaschewski

Rolf Lukaschewski

Rolf Lukaschewski

Rolf Lukaschewski

Rolf Lukaschewski

Rolf Lukaschewski

Rolf Lukaschewski

Rolf Lukaschewski

Rolf Lukaschewski

Rolf Lukaschewski

Rolf Lukaschewski

Rolf Lukaschewski

Rolf Lukaschewski

Rolf Lukaschewski

Rolf Lukaschewski

Rolf Lukaschewski

Rolf Lukaschewski

Rolf Lukaschewski
Mimmo Paladino
b.1948

Mimmo Paladino
Mimmo Paladino is an Italian Transavantgarde sculptor, painter, and muralist. Born on December 18, 1948 in Paduli, Italy, he attended the Liceo Artistico of Benevento. Paladino played a central role in developing the Transavantgarde movement, which sought to bring emotion, figuration, and mysticism back into avant-garde art. His early painting Cordoba (1984), a portrayal of two semi-abstracted figures tussling in a courtyard, has become one of his best-known images. Paladino was showcased at the 1980 Venice Biennale for its Transavantgarde-specific exhibition, and that same year, he had two solo exhibitions in New York. More recently, he garnered attention for his large-scale public installations, including The Salt Mountain (2010), a large white mound strewn with sculptures of horses lying on their sides. Paladino has also collaborated on many sound and visual art pieces with Brian Eno, the earliest of which, Dormienti, was presented the Roundhouse in London in 1999. He has shown work worldwide, including the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden in Washington, D.C. and the Tate Modern in London. He lives in Rome, Italy.

Mimmo Paladino

Mimmo Paladino

Mimmo Paladino

Mimmo Paladino

Mimmo Paladino

Mimmo Paladino

Mimmo Paladino

Mimmo Paladino

Mimmo Paladino

Mimmo Paladino

Mimmo Paladino

Mimmo Paladino

Mimmo Paladino

Mimmo Paladino

Mimmo Paladino

Mimmo Paladino

Mimmo Paladino

Mimmo Paladino
Enzo Cucchi
b.1949

Enzo Cucchi
(born 14 November 1949) is an Italian painter. A native of Morro d'Alba, province of Ancona, he was a key member of the Italian Transavanguardia movement, along with his countrymen Francesco Clemente, Mimmo Paladino, Nicola De Maria, and Sandro Chia. The movement was at its peak during the 1980s and was part of the worldwide movement of Neo-Expressionist painters.
Cucchi's first major Retrospective was held at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York 1986 and his works are held in numerous museum collections including the Museum of Modern Art New York, the Tate London and the Art Institute of Chicago. Cucchi lives and works in Rome and Ancona.
Enzo Cucchi was born in 1949 in Morro d‘Alba, a farming village in the province of Ancona in central Italy. As an autodidactic painter Cucchi was lauded in his early years even though he was more interested in poetry. He frequently visited poet Mino De Angelis, who was in charge of the magazine Tau. Through La Nuova Foglio di Macerata, a small publishing house, he met with art critic Achille Bonito Oliva, an important figure in the artist's prospective career. In its catalogues La Nuova Foglio di Macerata published writings of artists such as Cucchi's Il veleno è stato sollevato e trasportato! in 1976. Frequent trips to Rome in the mid-seventies revived Cucchi's interest in visual arts. He moved to Rome, temporarily abandoned poetry and dedicated himself exclusively to the visual arts. Here Cucchi met with different artists such as Sandro Chia, Francesco Clemente, Mimmo Paladino and Nicola de Maria with whom he began to work in close contact and to establish dialectical and intellectual dialogues.
Achille Bonito Oliva was the first to name this young generation of Italian artists of the seventies as a group: In Flash Art Magazine, no. 92–93, 1979, he used the term Transavanguardia for the first time. The official proclamation of the Transavanguardia took place at the 1980 Venice Biennial. The term was an idiom for the art of this young generation following the Avant-garde art of the sixties. These artists no longer sought to evoke discomfort in the spectator by all means and to force him to go beyond the work to grasp it fully.
The members of the Transavanguardia-group have diverse working methods. Their identity as a group is not dependent on rules or any binding language of expression, but they share a preference for motifs gathered from imaginable reality and the free use of past and present. Cucchi uses forms suggestive of the landscape, legends and traditions of his home-region. He shows nature, history and culture in a playful relationship with our technical world, using symbols like a train or an ocean-liner and employing colour in terms of idea, expansion and motion rather than for pictorial sensation. His artwork is often accompanied by poetic texts some of which have been published.
Aside from the numerous Transavanguardia- group-exhibitions, his work has been the subject of solo shows in galleries, museums and cultural sites all over the world.

Enzo Cucchi

Enzo Cucchi

Enzo Cucchi

Enzo Cucchi

Enzo Cucchi

Enzo Cucchi

Enzo Cucchi

Enzo Cucchi

Enzo Cucchi

Enzo Cucchi

Enzo Cucchi

Enzo Cucchi

Enzo Cucchi
Francesco Clemente
b.1952
Francesco Clemente
(born 23 March 1952) is an Italian contemporary artist. He has lived at various times in Italy, in India, and in New York City. Some of his work is influenced by the traditional art and culture of India. He has worked in various artistic media including drawing, fresco, graphics, mosaic, oils and sculpture. He was among the principal figures in the Italian Transavanguardia movement of the 1980s, which was characterised by a rejection of Formalism and conceptual art and a return to figurative art and Symbolism.
Clemente was born in 1952 in Naples, in Campania in southern Italy. In 1970 he enrolled in the faculty of architecture of the Sapienza, the university of Rome, but did not complete a degree there. In Rome he came into contact with contemporary artists such as Luigi Ontani and Alighiero Boetti, who had come to the city at about the same time, and also with the American Cy Twombly, who lived there. Boetti, who was ten years older, became both a friend and a mentor; in 1974 they visited Afghanistan together. With Ontani, Clemente gave performances at the Galleria L'Attico. Despite his close involvement with these artists associated with the Arte povera movement, and his interest in others such as Pino Pascali and Michelangelo Pistoletto, Clemente preferred to work on paper. He made ink drawings of dreams and recollections of his childhood, and in 1971, in his first solo show, exhibited collages at the Galleria Giulia in Rome.
In 1973 Clemente made the first of many visits to India. He established a studio in Madras (now Chennai), and became interested in both the religious and folk traditions of India and in the traditional art and crafts of the country. In 1976 and 1977 he visited the library of the Theosophical Society of Madras to study the religious texts there. In 1980 and 1981 he worked on Francesco Clemente Pinxit, a series of twenty-four gouaches on antique hand-made rag paper, in collaboration with miniature painters from Orissa and Jaipur. In 1982 he moved to New York City, in the United States.

Francesco Clemente

Francesco Clemente

Francesco Clemente

Francesco Clemente

Francesco Clemente

Francesco Clemente
A History of the Heart in Three Rainbows

Francesco Clemente

Francesco Clemente

Francesco Clemente

Francesco Clemente

Francesco Clemente

Francesco Clemente

Francesco Clemente

Francesco Clemente

Francesco Clemente

Francesco Clemente

Francesco Clemente
Self-Portrait with and without the Mask
Robert Combas
b.1957

ROBERT COMBAS
Robert Combas
(born 25 May 1957, Lyon) is a French painter and sculptor. He lives and works in Paris.
He is widely recognized as a progenitor of the figuration libre movement that began in Paris around 1980 as a reaction to the art establishment in general and minimalism and conceptual art in particular.
Figuration libre is often regarded as having roots in Fauvism and Expressionism and is linked to contemporary movements such as Bad Painting and Neo-expressionism. It draws on pop cultural influences such as graffiti, cartoons and rock music in an attempt to produce a more varied, direct and honest reflection of contemporary society, often satirizing or critiquing its excesses.
Combas’ own work has always been strongly rooted in depictions of the human figure. The figures are often in wild, violent or orgiastic settings. Usually on large, often unstretched canvases, Combas crowds his flat pictorial space with a teeming proliferation of bodies, street poetry and designs reminiscent of the compulsive patterning in much folk and outsider art. He creates hectic narratives of war, crime, sex, celebration and transgression—in short, every phase that makes up the constant flux of modern life. In recent years a strong autobiographical strain has been evident in his work, which was present only on a subliminal level, if at all, in the earlier work.
Combas often seems to be offering the work as critique—of both the art establishment and society at large. The recent painting “I am greedy man” features a densely layered jostle of bodies, with the foreground dominated by transparent line figures, the background occupied by monochromatic figures and the middle ground reserved for two more fully realized figures, one in a business suit and the other muscular and shirtless. They dance in a swirl of text which seems to have no discernible beginning or end but which may be read as: “I am greedy man/ Please shout me babe/ Soul serenade is a lot of pussy/ Pussy gone on the Eiffel Tower/ My Eiffel Tower is long and large.” The lampoon of a society where all are anonymous except in the individual recognition of need and gratification is typical of Combas’ work throughout his career.
While Combas’ works often seem to carry an element of shock or confrontation, he insists the images are meant to engage the viewer, and their execution in vibrant color and bold, unfettered line communicate a spirit of proletarian camaraderie that offsets the tendency to overwhelm, in the larger works especially.

ROBERT COMBAS.

ROBERT COMBAS.

ROBERT COMBAS.

ROBERT COMBAS.

ROBERT COMBAS.

ROBERT COMBAS.

ROBERT COMBAS.

ROBERT COMBAS.

ROBERT COMBAS.

ROBERT COMBAS.

ROBERT COMBAS.

ROBERT COMBAS.

ROBERT COMBAS.

ROBERT COMBAS.

ROBERT COMBAS.

ROBERT COMBAS.

ROBERT COMBAS.

ROBERT COMBAS.

ROBERT COMBAS.

ROBERT COMBAS.

ROBERT COMBAS.

ROBERT COMBAS.

ROBERT COMBAS.

ROBERT COMBAS.

ROBERT COMBAS.

ROBERT COMBAS.

ROBERT COMBAS.

ROBERT COMBAS.

ROBERT COMBAS.

ROBERT COMBAS.
Jean-Michel Basquiat
1960 – 1988
Jean-Michel Basquiat
(December 22, 1960 – August 12, 1988) was an American artist who rose to success during the 1980s as part of the Neo-expressionism movement.
Basquiat first achieved notoriety in the late 1970s as part of the graffiti duo SAMO, alongside Al Diaz, writing enigmatic epigrams all over Manhattan, particularly in the cultural hotbed of the Lower East Side where rap, punk, and street art coalesced into early hip-hop music culture. By the early 1980s, his paintings were being exhibited in galleries and museums internationally. At 21, Basquiat became the youngest artist to ever take part in Documenta in Kassel, Germany. At 22, he was one of the youngest to exhibit at the Whitney Biennial in New York. The Whitney Museum of American Art held a retrospective of his artwork in 1992.
Basquiat's art focused on dichotomies such as wealth versus poverty, integration versus segregation, and inner versus outer experience. He appropriated poetry, drawing, and painting, and married text and image, abstraction, figuration, and historical information mixed with contemporary critique. He used social commentary in his paintings as a tool for introspection and for identifying with his experiences in the black community, as well as attacks on power structures and systems of racism. His visual poetics were acutely political and direct in their criticism of colonialism and support for class struggle.
Since his death at the age of 27 in 1988, Basquiat's work has steadily increased in value. In 2017, Untitled, a 1982 painting depicting a black skull with red and yellow rivulets, sold for a record-breaking $110.5 million, becoming one of the most expensive paintings ever purchased.

Jean-Michel Basquiat

Jean-Michel Basquiat
Self Portrait

Jean-Michel Basquiat

Jean-Michel Basquiat

Jean-Michel Basquiat

Jean-Michel Basquiat

Jean-Michel Basquiat

Jean-Michel Basquiat

Jean-Michel Basquiat

Jean-Michel Basquiat

Jean-Michel Basquiat

Jean-Michel Basquiat

Jean-Michel Basquiat

Jean-Michel Basquiat

Jean-Michel Basquiat

Jean-Michel Basquiat

Jean-Michel Basquiat

Jean-Michel Basquiat

Jean-Michel Basquiat

Jean-Michel Basquiat

Jean-Michel Basquiat

Jean-Michel Basquiat

Jean-Michel Basquiat

Jean-Michel Basquiat

Jean-Michel Basquiat