Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jun 11
Gerhard Richter Opens 26-Painting 'Landschaften' Show at David Zwirner in New York
Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jun 11

Gerhard Richter Opens 26-Painting 'Landschaften' Show at David Zwirner in New York

2 articles · Updated · The New York Times · Jun 11

Summary

  • Twenty-six works anchor “Gerhard Richter: Landschaften” at David Zwirner, a New York exhibition spanning 20th-century paintings that argues for how to live amid 21st-century uncertainty.
  • Richter, 94, fills the show with blurred views of sea, mountains, fields and sky that invoke the Romantic sublime while staying static and clouded, reflecting his long engagement with history’s political ruptures.
  • Several works are actually Richter’s “abstract pictures,” where painted gestures are scraped back with a squeegee, extending the exhibition’s theme of doubt, negation and revision.
  • Loans from major public and private collections include paintings not seen in the United States for decades, giving the show unusual historical reach as Richter’s once-startling style has become canonical.

Insights

Richter's landscapes express a 'yearning.' How did this feeling create multi-million dollar masterpieces?
Why is Gerhard Richter's method of erasing his own paintings celebrated as a creative triumph?
In an age of AI fakes, what can Richter's blurred art teach us about truth?