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Tate St Ives Exhibition

Alex Katz: Give Me Tomorrow

19 May – 23 September 2012
Exhibition banner for Alex Katz exhibition at Tate St Ives, showing two women in swimming costumes

Born in 1927 in Brooklyn, New York, Alex Katz is one of the most important and respected living American artists. In 2012 Katz will celebrate his 85th birthday, and a career that spans a remarkable six decades.

For his exhibition at Tate St Ives Katz brings together over 30 canvases, plus collages and cut-outs, that span the full breadth of his career from the 1950s to now. Given the Gallery’s location on the beach, and the nature of the summer season here, the exhibition places a special emphasis on Katz’s seascapes and beach scenes, as well as images of family holidays and friends, painted in his own seaside retreat of Lincolnville, Maine, where he continues to spend his summers.

To accompany the show Katz has made a personal selection of works from the Tate collection. Drawn from British, European and American artists, he brings together an illuminating cross-generational selection of artists for this special one-room display.

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Alex Katz

Katz’s paintings are defined by their flatness of colour and form, their economy of line, and their cool but seductive emotional detachment. Working with classical themes of portraiture, landscape, figure studies, marine scenes and flowers, many of Katz’s works picture an everyday America of easy living, leisure and recreation. Influenced as much by style, fashion and music as he is art history, he remains a very classical painter, working in the tradition of European and American artists like Manet, Matisse, and Hopper.

Katz began exhibiting in the 1950s, emerging at a time when Abstract Expressionism was still the dominant force in American art. Whilst his interests were firmly based in the previous generation of artists including Pollock, Rothko, Guston and De Kooning (De Kooning and Guston in particular offered early support and encouragement), his own painting developed in reaction to their work, and he is acknowledged as a hugely influential precursor to the Pop Art movement with which he became associated throughout the 1960s.

Katz has created an unmistakable language and has remained a prolific painter and an influential and important figure for generations of artists, including now senior painters like David Salle, Peter Halley and Richard Prince, as well as younger artists like Brian Calvin, Peter Doig and Elizabeth Peyton.

Tate St Ives

Porthmeor Beach
St Ives
Cornwall TR26 1TG
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Dates

19 May – 23 September 2012

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The Alex Katz Exhibition Supporters Group

The Alex Katz Exhibition Supporters Group

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Find out more

  • Alex Katz in his first studio in Lincolnville, Maine, 1974

    Style matters

    Martin Clark

    The artistic director of Tate St Ives visited one of America’s most respected artists working today, in his New York studio, where Alex Katz talked about how he broke away from the prevailing mood of Abstract Expressionism in the late 1950s to develop his energetic and colourful signature style that has influenced a generation of younger artists

  • Artist

    Alex Katz

    born 1927
  • Artist

    Peter Doig

    born 1959
  • Artist

    Jackson Pollock

    1912–1956
  • Artist

    Mark Rothko

    1903–1970
  • Artist

    Philip Guston

    1913–1980
  • Artist

    Willem de Kooning

    1904–1997
  • Artist

    Richard Prince

    born 1949
  • Artist

    David Salle

    born 1952
  • Artist

    Peter Halley

    born 1953
  • Artist

    Henri Matisse

    1869–1954
  • Artist

    Edouard Manet

    1832–1883
Artwork
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