ART CITIES: N.York-Hernan Bas

Hernan Bas, Conceptual artist #16 (Performance based; the founder and reigning champion of a weekly pillow fight tournament), 2023, Acrylic on linen, 84 x 96 cm, 33 1/16 x 37 13/16 inches, © Hernan Bas, Courtesy the artist and Lehmann Maupin, New York, Hong Kong, Seoul, and London

Hernan Bas is often compared to American painters like Elizabeth Peyton and Karen Kilimnik. Yet while this older generation has depicted pop culture’s beautiful people, Bas’s first love is literature. Describing his works as partly an attempt to distil the feeling generated by a book into one image, each series of paintings is inspired by a different set of authors including Rimbaud, Huysmans, Wilde, Dickinson and Melville.

By Dimitris Lempesis
Photo: Lehman Maupin Gallery Archive

Herman Bas is best known for his narratively rich scenes that feature a wide-range of references spanning art and literature, popular culture, kitsch, the occult, religion, and mythology. Across his works, Bas seeks to defamiliarize everyday experience through humor, revealing the surreal and absurd lurking beneath the mundane. In his solo exhibition “The Conceptualists: Vol. II”, Bas marries his personal appreciation of conceptual artists with his ongoing exploration of eccentricity. Whereas a number of prior works by the artist depict figures known as “enthusiasts” engaged in esoteric habits, this body of work reimagines absurdity and obsession as foundations of artistic practice. Each work in the series depicts a fictive conceptual artist enraptured by his eccentric creative pursuits. In “Conceptual artist #22 (The sole source for his prized homemade pulp paper is vintage Pulp Fiction)”, Bas envisions an artist who makes paper from Harlequin romance novels (turning one form of pulp into another), while in “Conceptual artist #18 (Spirited by a passion for urban legends, he fabricates roadside memorials from which to hitchhike from)”, Bas imagines a performance-based artist who erects fake road-side memorials and hitch-hikes from one to another. At the heart of the series lies a productive tension between conceptual and representational forms of artmaking. Whereas Bas’s fictive artists create thoroughly idea-based, propositional works that perhaps can be expressed by their titles alone, Bas’s own paintings remain invested in the art object and reward close looking. And while he depicts artists engaged in fervently conceptual practices, Bas’s compositions summon a wide range of art historical references that lurk in collective consciousness and popular imagination. “Conceptual artist #17 (With the aid of scissors, paper doilies and origami he elevates lily ponds to attract potential princes)” might call to mind Claude Monet’s waterlilies, while “Conceptual artist #16 (Performance based; the founder and reigning champion of a weekly pillow fight tournament)” evokes American Realist painter George Bellows’s canonical boxing scenes. In the latter, Bas undermines this traditional theater of masculinity, and in the place of a boxing match he depicts two male figures engaged in a pillow fight. A space of intimacy becomes a sporting arena; in lieu of a boxing ring, Bas depicts a mattress and bedframe lined with red ribbon bows. Indeed, Bas’s practice is characterized by the frequent convergence of the private and public realms, and he often reformulates masculine tropes repeated throughout art history to give way to queer interpretations. Throughout the series, art haunts everyday existence. “Conceptual artist #19 (A child of the 80’s, he places his Polaroid self portraits in a familiar spot whenever he’s feeling lost)”, contains a number of subtle references to Andy Warhol. The many milk cartons—which Bas has silkscreened onto the canvas—recall Warhol’s silkscreens of mass-produced goods (such as soup cans and soda bottles), while the Polaroid camera in the subject’s hands evokes his iconic Polaroid images. Perhaps the work’s most emphatic homage can be seen in the figure’s socks, where a pattern of skulls references Warhol’s early “Death and Disaster” series. Here and across this larger body of work, Bas’s sensitivity to art history results not in an insular investigation of artmaking, but rather in an expansive consideration of art’s capacity to permeate the collective cultural imagination.

Photo: Hernan Bas, Conceptual artist #16 (Performance based; the founder and reigning champion of a weekly pillow fight tournament), 2023, Acrylic on linen, 84 x 96 cm, 33 1/16 x 37 13/16 inches, Photo by Silvia Ros, © Hernan Bas, Courtesy the artist and Lehmann Maupin, New York, Hong Kong, Seoul, and London

Info: Lehman Maupin Gallery, 501 West 24th Street, New York, NY, USA, Duration: 17/5-17/6/2023, Days & Hours: Tue-Sat 10:00-18:00, www.lehmannmaupin.com/

Hernan Bas, Conceptual artist #17 (With the aid of scissors, paper doilies and origami he elevates lily ponds to attract potential princes), 2023, Acrylic on linen, 84 x 72 x 1.5 inches, 213.4 x 182.9 x 3.81 cm, Photo by Silvia Ros, © Hernan Bas, Courtesy the artist and Lehmann Maupin, New York, Hong Kong, Seoul, and London
Hernan Bas, Conceptual artist #17 (With the aid of scissors, paper doilies and origami he elevates lily ponds to attract potential princes), 2023, Acrylic on linen, 84 x 72 x 1.5 inches, 213.4 x 182.9 x 3.81 cm, Photo by Silvia Ros, © Hernan Bas, Courtesy the artist and Lehmann Maupin, New York, Hong Kong, Seoul, and London

 

 

Hernan Bas, Conceptual artist #19 (A child of the 80’s, he places his Polaroid self portraits in a familiar spot whenever he’s feeling lost), 2023, Acrylic on linen, 72 x 60 inches, 182.9 x 152.4 cm, Photo by Silvia Ros, © Hernan Bas, Courtesy the artist and Lehmann Maupin, New York, Hong Kong, Seoul, and London
Hernan Bas, Conceptual artist #19 (A child of the 80’s, he places his Polaroid self portraits in a familiar spot whenever he’s feeling lost), 2023, Acrylic on linen, 72 x 60 inches, 182.9 x 152.4 cm, Photo by Silvia Ros, © Hernan Bas, Courtesy the artist and Lehmann Maupin, New York, Hong Kong, Seoul, and London

 

 

Hernan Bas, Conceptual artist #23 (Popsicle stick sculptor; a purist, he consumes his materials in devotion to his craft, leading to his inevitable last work), 2023, Acrylic and pencil on linen, 84 x 72 x 1.5 inches, 213.4 x 182.9 x 3.81 cm, Photo by Silvia Ros, © Hernan Bas, Courtesy the artist and Lehmann Maupin, New York, Hong Kong, Seoul, and London
Hernan Bas, Conceptual artist #23 (Popsicle stick sculptor; a purist, he consumes his materials in devotion to his craft, leading to his inevitable last work), 2023, Acrylic and pencil on linen, 84 x 72 x 1.5 inches, 213.4 x 182.9 x 3.81 cm, Photo by Silvia Ros, © Hernan Bas, Courtesy the artist and Lehmann Maupin, New York, Hong Kong, Seoul, and London