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Excerpt:
Precious few artists are ever embraced by the mainstream
art establishment. Fewer still achieve commercial and
critical success. Even rarer are those who succeed despite
working on their own terms, with little formal training
and no gallery representation. When this last group
does break through – the Dargers, the Wölflis, the van
Goghs – recognition tends to be posthumous, if it comes
at all.
When such an artist’s subject-matter tends toward representations
of murderers, serial killers, sideshow freaks, pustulent
whores, apocalyptic catastrophes and visions of Hell,
and chronicles society’s losers and outcasts – the lame,
the infirm, the marginalised, the disenfranchised, the
accused and the insane – obscurity seems all but guaranteed.
Yet during the past year the international art establishment
has recognised and validated a genuine renegade, a painter
who has toiled for decades well outside its strictures:
Joe Coleman.
It all began with a major retrospective: thirty-three
paintings at an established, definitively uptown New
York gallery (see Raw Vision 57), heralded with a full-page
New York Times feature.
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Curators from Paris’s Palais de Tokyo saw the New York
exhibition and offered Coleman a one-man show in February
2007. In May, thirty paintings, as well as drawings,
video and film, and objects from The Odditorium, Coleman’s
private museum, were installed across all four floors
of the KW Institute for Contemporary Art in Berlin.
This past spring, recognition came full circle when
over 20 of Coleman’s works were displayed in yet another
gallery just off tony New York’s Fifth Avenue, together
with works by Hans Memling and other masters of the
15th century Netherlands renaissance.
Museums in Japan and Italy have expressed an interest.
It’s a now-or-never moment. Prior to the first New York
show, almost no-one had the opportunity to see more
than one painting at a time, as virtually all Coleman’s
work is in private collections.
‘These are major exhibitions,’ confirms the artist,
‘not some rinky-dink space, an East Village gallery
or outsider art thing. But I don’t want to use terms
that could be taken as insulting. It means a lot to
me that these places supported me early on. I’ll still
always support places like that.’
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