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Notes
If one looks at the large-format square townscapes [CR: 171, 175–177-3, 249–251], specific features of the artistic execution can be discerned.
In Townscape Madrid [CR: 171] streets, trees and buildings are clearly structured and easily recognisable. Some townscapes which were painted a little later on, such as Townscape Paris [CR: 175], Townscape D [CR: 176] and versions of Townscape F [CR: 177/1-3] and Townscape PL [CR: 249–251], appear to have been painted more quickly and less precisely; many details vanish due to the gestural and pastose application of paint. In Townscape Paris in particular, it is difficult to distinguish streets from houses.
Because of the missing details, the large-format cityscapes recall aerial photographs of post-war bombed-out cities – a parallel which Gerhard Richter himself draws in retrospect: "When I look back on the townscapes now, they do seem to me to recall certain images of the destruction of Dresden during the war."1
Gerhard Richter's artistic examination of figuration and abstraction in the townscapes also seems to play with distances: from afar the pictures can easily be identified as cityscapes, however, should the beholder move closer to the painting, the depiction dissolves into expanses and strokes of white, grey and black.
The artist plays with the viewer's urge to identify what is depicted, and it seems as if Richter himself tries to fathom when the image ceases to be recognisable.
Richter describes his preoccupation with bird’s-eye views of cities as "abandonment of the concept of interesting content and illusionistic painting; a spot of paint should be a spot of paint, and the motif needn't have a message or allow for interpretation."2 Nevertheless, in this series Gerhard Richter does not completely depart from his originally concrete motifs, as underlined by the choice of the descriptive title Townscape.
1 Comments on some works, 1991 in: Gerhard Richter: Text. Writings, Interviews and Letters 1961–2007, Thames & Hudson, London, 2009, p. 262
2 'Work Overview', 1968 in: Gerhard Richter: Text, p. 53
Notes prepared by editorial team -
Exhibitions
- Gerhard Richter: Paintings
San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA), San Francisco, USA March 15, 1989 May 28, 1989
- Gerhard Richter: Paintings
Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington D.C., USA December 14, 1988 February 12, 1989
- Gerhard Richter: Paintings
Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, USA September 17, 1988 November 27, 1988
- Gerhard Richter: Paintings
Art Gallery of Ontario (AGO), Toronto, Canada April 29, 1988 July 10, 1988
- Gerhard Richter: Paintings 1964–1974
Barbara Gladstone Gallery and Rudolf Zwirner Gallery, New York, USA December 13, 1986 January 17, 1987
- Gerhard Richter – Städtebilder
Gerhard Richter – Townscapes
Galerie Heiner Friedrich, Munich, Germany April 14, 1970 May 05, 1970
- Gerhard Richter: Paintings
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Literature
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Harten, Jürgen / Hering, Karl-Heinz / Honisch, Dieter / Loock, Ulrich / Ronte, Dieter / Elger, Dietmar
Gerhard Richter. Bilder = Paintings 1962 - 1985 DuMont, Köln, 1986 Mentioned: pp. 39, 376Illustrated: p. 114 -
Schampers, Karel / Tilroe, Anna / Buchloh, Benjamin H. D.
Gerhard Richter 1988/89 Museum Boymans-van Beuningen, Rotterdam, 1989 Mentioned: pp. 25, 26Illustrated: p. 27 -
Zweite, Armin
Gerhard Richter. Atlas Verlag Fred Jahn, München, 1989 Mentioned: p. 12 -
Wilmes, Ulrich / Buchloh, Benjamin H. D. / Söntgen, Beate / Stemmrich, Gregor
Gerhard Richter. Abstrakte Bilder Hatje Cantz Verlag, Ostfildern-Ruit, 2008 Mentioned: p. 137 -
Wilmes, Ulrich / Buchloh, Benjamin H. D. / Söntgen, Beate / Stemmrich, Gregor
Gerhard Richter. Large Abstracts Hatje Cantz Verlag, Ostfildern-Ruit, 2008 Mentioned: p. 137
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Harten, Jürgen / Hering, Karl-Heinz / Honisch, Dieter / Loock, Ulrich / Ronte, Dieter / Elger, Dietmar