{"id":631,"date":"2011-10-21T16:45:43","date_gmt":"2011-10-21T14:45:43","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/alexanderkoch.info\/?p=631"},"modified":"2026-02-23T19:56:37","modified_gmt":"2026-02-23T18:56:37","slug":"schmutz-der-die-sonne-faengt-chris-martins-sozialer-horizont-einer-spirituellen-abstraktion","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/alexanderkoch.info\/en\/schmutz-der-die-sonne-faengt-chris-martins-sozialer-horizont-einer-spirituellen-abstraktion\/","title":{"rendered":"Dirt that Catches the Sun. Chris Martin&#8217;s Social Horizon of a Spiritual Abstraction"},"content":{"rendered":"<div>\n<p><span lang=\"EN-US\">Painting and Buddhism are good pals. While wandering together through New York\u2019s galleries and bars, Painting regularly ponders the difference between good and bad pictures \u2013 and Buddhism counters with old Tibetan words of wisdom on which Painting\u2019s ambitions roll off like rain from the oil stains on the asphalt. When Chris Martin dispatches Painting and Buddhism through the streets of Chelsea, dirt crunches under their shoes. <\/span>And while whimsically arguing about the essence of painting in Martin\u2019s article \u00bbBuddhism, Landscape and the Absolute Truth about Abstract Painting\u00ab for<span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><em>The Brooklyn Rail<\/em>, the smell of alcohol on their breath combines with the putrid sweet smell of nocturnal Manhattan.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p>Painting and Buddhism \u2013 just as abstraction and spirituality \u2013 appear in Martin\u2019s article in addition to his work like two old friends who, unshaven and somewhat dishevelled, flee from colour-field painting\u2019s precious surfaces and esoteric New Age murmurs into the next bar, to down the postmodern chic of the last preview party with a few beers. Martin is not an ironist. But the doubled solitary confinement of a spiritual art in the hallowed halls of the white cube on the one hand, and in the saccharine lotus esotericism on the other, is not for him. To be sure, he stands in the tradition of modern abstract art\u2019s spiritual branch, whose saints, as canonised by our museums, range from Paul Klee, Piet Mondrian, Barnett Newman and many others up to and including Helmut Federle. But the further Martin\u2019s work reaches, the more it extends over and above this canon, in fact takes it to very different social contexts to be discussed here.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p>\u00bbAbstract painting is the dirt that catches the sun,\u00ab writes Martin and seeks the aesthetics of the sublime in this world, in the everyday, in popular culture, and in his neighbourhood on Graham Avenue in Brooklyn, where he moved his studio in 1984. Since the early 1990s he has regularly hung canvasses on the facades of buildings on the surrounding streets and leaves them there for weeks. In 2000 he painted a group of large black-light paintings for the Galapagos bar, adjusting it to the ultra-violet light of the night. For a 2005 exhibition poster, he took a photograph on the bank of the East River showing 50 friends gathered around the artist and four of his large-format paintings like a hippie community at a street fair. Particularly large canvasses are painted on the roof of his studio or outdoors on the pasture, where chickens strut across the fresh paint, and rain washes away one or the other picture before it even had the chance to dry. \u00bbIf everything is futile anyway,\u00ab you hear Buddhism saying, \u00bbwhy bother tidying up?\u00ab<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p>Where does this gesture come from that seems somewhat coquettishly relaxed at first glance; somewhat idiosyncratic, eclectic, and very literally romantic? What is Martin driving at? What is he offering us that deserves our attention and perhaps even our approval? What does his painting contribute to art history that makes it worthy of assuming a place in it? Why does he paint mushrooms? And what do they have to do with Buddhism? A first quick response: Chris Martin generously builds bridges between cultures that have long proven their peaceful coexistence in the everyday lives of many people, but which have an effect like oil and water on all those people who would prefer that their lives and the world (and art) were systematic \u2013 cate-gorised in compartments that ensure that everything is in its proper place. And of all places, he builds these bridges leading from an old consecrated plateau of Western sophistication, namely the abstraction that has long served the United States as a trademark of its rational and spiritual superiority over other ways of life and ideologies.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p>It is possible that in the process, he is not doing a service to some American identities. This explains why he has heretofore paid scant heed to the aesthetic canon of the (art)political mainstream. Even though, like few others, Martin has the capacity to reconsider one of the great ideological achievements of American history for the present day: the conviction that the solidarity of a person toward the body politic does not depend on his or her religious feelings. The fact that this conviction has fewer followers today than in past decades makes Martin\u2019s oeuvre appear even more politically relevant.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p><strong><em>Here<\/em>, 1995\u20131996<\/strong><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p>For 12 years starting in 1992, Chris Martin worked as an art therapist with HIV-positive patients. Their dying is reflected in his series of<span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><em>Death Paintings<\/em>.<span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><em>Here<\/em><span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span>can be seen as the key work of this group. The drawing of a geometric cube lying on the horizon line guides the viewer\u2019s attention into the depth like a window reveal situated in the middle of 12 square-meter monochromatic black ground. Martin makes programmatic use of one-point perspective, embodiment of the humanist turning point during the European Renaissance. But the fleeing lines in Martin\u2019s painting open no window to a divinely ordained world inhabited by human beings. They describe an interior space in the middle of nothingness, a portal in the void.<span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><em>Here<\/em><span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span>marks an imaginary space at the threshold between this world and the next, a narrow zone between us and death.<span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><em>Here<\/em>means a spiritual place.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p>But where is this place, precisely? In answer to this question, Martin shows his renunciation, in terms of content, of the colour-field painting that his pictorial concept nevertheless seems to resemble at first glance \u2013 thus also of a guiding aesthetic paradigm of post-war modern art in the West. This renunciation is also evident in his use of one-point perspective, which is so firmly grounded in the pictorial culture of Christian art. Mark Rothko and Barnett Newman, two major proponents of colour-field painting, rejected perspective space and saw immersing one\u2019s sight in a colour space of painting as the gateway to a transcendental experience, which was closer to Jewish culture. Rothko\u2019s subtle depths of colour and Newman\u2019s strict monochromatic areas would directly dissolve the subject\u2019s boundaries, its existence in the here and now before the canvas \u2013 also the artists\u2019 reaction to the trauma of the Holocaust. To do so, it was necessary to blot out any and all attachment to the circumstances of the pictures\u2019 environment. In opposition, Martin, who was essentially raised on Pop Art\u2019s critique of abstraction\u2019s purity requirement, virtually welcomed the profane, nearly lapidary character of his canvasses, literally covering them entirely with quick, course brushstrokes of paint. He does not suggest any exclusive dimension of experience that gives his picture surfaces an advantage of some sort over everyday objects as a result of whatever subtle materiality and, unlike Rothko and Newman, does not have to presuppose the \u00bbneutrality\u00ab of the white cube. As one commentator wrote, Martin\u2019s pictures are as \u00bbdaily as breakfast.\u00ab It is therefore by no means surprising that years after<span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><em>Here<\/em>, he completely covered some canvasses with pieces of toast or with pillows.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p>And the horizon line that Martin drew under the central axis? It structures the canvas into a top and bottom, thus suggesting a landscape. In other<span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><em>Death Paintings<\/em>, stars are additionally painted in the top third of the picture, underscoring the impression of a nocturne. Landscapes at night in fact run like a golden thread through Martin\u2019s oeuvre, for example in a such major work from the 1980s as<span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><em>John Bill Haynes\u2019 House<\/em>(1989). The window motif and the view into the darkness can also be found here. A band of text traverses the composition, providing a concrete written localisation and point in time for the painting, and that would appear in many others. And particularly large-format pictures such as<span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><em>Lake<\/em><span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span>(2000) were painted after<span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><em>Here<\/em>. A night-time swim in a lake, the horizon line has moved far above the centre of the painting; the inner pictorial viewpoint is close to the surface of the water. The rising moon and a few stars are rhythmically reflected in the waves. The tranquil sublime grandeur of the experience of nature is transferred to the viewer standing before this nearly 11-meter canvas. The picture\u2019s composition and colours \u2013 which still appear in the<span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><em>Death Paintings<\/em><span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span>for the most part as conceptual graphic reductions \u2013 now agree with the impression of nature. In his vocabulary of forms, Martin approaches indigenous folk art while thematically taking up the \u00bbspiritual landscapes\u00ab of American Romantic art that is still so little known in Europe.<span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><em>Lake<\/em><span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span>is deeply rooted in the experience of the North American landscape und in the traditions of its representation.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p>But with \u00bbspiritual landscapes\u00ab, a term has been mentioned that concludes the question concerning the spiritual location in Martin\u2019s oeuvre for the time being.<span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><em>Here<\/em><span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span>is not the place of the dissolution of the subject\u2019s boundaries in pure abstraction.<span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><em>Here<\/em><span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span>begins here, literally, in the experience and in the position of a body in space, bound to a specific point in time and to a geographic topography that will increasingly become a social topography over the course of his work.<span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><em>Here<\/em><span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span>is a meditative state with open eyes firmly set on the horizon \u2013 and in the case of the<span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><em>Death Paintings<\/em><span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span>\u2013 on death as well. Ethical or religious assumptions, of which the history of abstraction has seen many, are not applied in this case. For this alone a debt of gratitude is owed Chris Martin for remaining impervious to any and all religious concepts. And yet, perhaps because of this, he is able to integrate the most diverse spiritual traditions into his paintings in a positive eclectic manner. Those who wish to hold fast to religious notions and their institutionalisation will receive little pleasure from Martin\u2019s pictures. But those who conversely welcome the secularisation of the modern world and nonetheless acknowledge that it has offered the spiritual needs of many people few alternatives other than the capitalist value and commodity fetishism will consider Martin\u2019s position.<span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p><strong><em>Staring into the sun<\/em>, 2002<\/strong><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p>Two trips to India in 1983 and 2002 had a crucial influence on Chris Martin\u2019s painting. He produced a larger group of paintings in 2002 that represent a turning point in his oeuvre. Martin now worked with clear, in part garish hues and colour contrasts, finding his way to stable, powerful compositions. Titles like<span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><em>Ganges Sunrise, Sunrise Asi Ghat Varanasi, High Noon at Manikarnika Ghat,<\/em><span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span>and<span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><em>Staring Into The Sun<\/em>allude to their motifs. Varanasi (Banaras), the city of the god Shiva, is considered Hinduism\u2019s most sacred site. More than a million people come every day and throng to the \u00bbghats,\u00ab the cremation sites on the steps leading down to the banks of the River Ganges. According to Hindus, the soul of whomever is cremated here is released from the endless cycle of reincarnation, and thus they entrust the ashes of the deceased to the river. Death is again the focus of this group of works. The images mark a moment at the threshold between life and death. The break of a new day, the rising sun is mirrored in the waves blackened by the ashes at a place that people hope has the power to keep them from returning for another earthly existence.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p><em>Staring Into The Sun<\/em><span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span>(2002) exaggerates the reflection of the sunlight into a gaudy yellow and red orange, a colour effect that occurs after looking directly at the sun for a moment. \u00bbStaring into the sun \u2013 that\u2019s what you\u2019re never supposed to do,\u00ab says Chris Martin, meaning the injuries that the retina could otherwise sustain by doing so. Only by looking down can one see the sun, which is reflected in the water indirectly. Another picture with the same title varies the theme. Three sections of canvas measuring a total of ten meters in height and three meters wide that have been pushed together are folded into the space in such a way that two-thirds of the picture lies on the ground, blocking frontal access to the vertical upper portion (<em>Staring Into The Sun<\/em>, 2002). Its top edge consists of a sunny yellow beam. Blue colour fields of various widths run underneath over a red background that tapers off in three stages toward the lower or front edge of the work.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p>The three panels address the tiering of the funeral processions and the masses of pilgrims pushing their ways through the city\u2019s narrow streets toward the cremation sites, where the funeral pyres are located. But the composition also resembles a schematic depiction of the retina, the arrangement of rod and cone cells that process the arriving light \u2013 or are scorched when they receive too much of it. In the process,<span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><em>Staring Into The Sun<\/em><span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span>interleaves in a remarkable way the physis of visual perception with the topography of the Manikarnika Ghat and thus the finiteness of the body with the finiteness of sight.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p>Incidentally, reproductions are pasted onto the lower edge of a second version of this three-part painting from 2011, including a picture of Amy Winehouse, who died the same year. Chris Martin dedicated a variation of the motif painted on a single canvas,<span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><em>High Noon at Manikarnika Ghat<\/em>(2002\u20132003), to his friend and artist colleague Frank Moore. Moore was an AIDS activist who developed the red solidarity ribbon in 1991 with the Visual AIDS group. He died in 2002.<span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><em>High Noon<\/em>\u2026 is thus turned into a requiem. The dedication is at the bottom right.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p><strong><em>Dance<\/em>, 2006\u20132008<\/strong><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p>Text elements, usually brief phrases from sentences, can be found in Martin\u2019s work since the late 1980s. The first dedication of a picture I am aware of dates from 1996,<span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><em>Homage to Alfred and Bill<\/em><span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span>(1982\u20131996). Martin is referring here to Alfred Jensen, an Abstract Expressionist painter who is less well known in Europe, and the New York painter Bill Jensen. But Martin previously seemed to still be at odds with his forebears \u2013 and with himself as well. In an earlier star picture (the seven-pointed star will later become one of Martin\u2019s most popular motifs) entitled<span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><em>I Am Not<\/em>\u2026 (1988\u20131992) he distances himself from icons of abstraction: \u00bbI am not Hilma af Klint,\u00ab \u00bbI am not Julian\u00ab (Schnabel), \u00bbI am not Alfred Jensen.\u00ab But also: \u00bbI am not Chris,\u00ab \u00bbI am not I.\u00ab The sentences are wedged onto a sky-blue background that visually opens up behind a canvas with a star-shape laceration that has been primed in black and sprinkled with gold confetti. But the \u00bbI\u00ab at the beginning of every sentence paradoxically and almost emblematically confirms, in the middle of the picture, the authorship of the person who is distancing himself. Identity and the ego might be negligible and overcome, as Buddhism aspires to, but the author\u2019s \u00bbspeaker\u2019s position\u00ab remains initially in place.<span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p>The distancing from his heroes was later thrown into reverse. From 1996 to the present,<span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><em>Homage to Alfred and Bill<\/em><span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span>was followed by uncounted inscriptions with which Martin pays his respects to colleagues from the world of painting and especially music; some of them famous, others far from the mainstream. Some, like Frank Moore, Michael Jackson, or James Brown, were occasioned by their deaths. Especially beautiful is a series of four small pictures that are all collaged with a pin-up girl greeting Alfred Jensen:<span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><em>Good Morning Alfred Jensen, Good Morning!<\/em><span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span>(2005\u20132007).<span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><em>Good Evening Alfred Jensen, Good Evening!<\/em><span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span>(2007). With his homage practice, Martin breaks through the competiveness nature and innovative thinking so typical of contemporary art. Here, too, he distances himself from modernist doctrines. He does not seem interested in originality or authenticity, but rather in extensive nets of inner and outer pictorial contexts that he throws out ever more generously. In the process, he continually incorporates new cultural, social, and political themes by means of references supplemented by collage techniques. His store of material is also growing, becoming lavish and scurrilous on occasion.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p>Martin\u2019s homage practice reached its preliminary peak in<span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><em>Dance<\/em><span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span>(2006\u20132008), as did his networking of diverse cultural contexts. Nine names are now placed in a row at the foot of the canvas, which is 3.4 meters high and 6.1 meters wide. Kurtis Blow, Grandmaster Flash, Kool Moe Dee, and other 1970s pioneers and eighties icons of hip-hop and rap comprise the entire base of the image. They popularised the urban ghetto recitative, invented DJing and sampling \u2013 postmodern cultural techniques. The row of names also includes the Swedish painter, spiritualist, and anthroposophist Hilma af Klint and Alfred Jensen again \u2026 in addition to his lesser-known contemporaries Paul Feeley and Myron Stout. Martin\u2019s large-scale composition places this multiple dedication against the backdrop of a social frame of reference. A portrait of each of the cited protagonists is additionally pasted onto the left edge of the picture like a small devotional image. Some of the people are allocated a collaged object: (plastic) marijuana leaves, coins, and dollar bills, vinyl records, newspaper articles, feathers, and pills. Alfred Jensen is given a shell. A banana peel has also been stapled to the canvas and painted black \u2013 a salutation to Andy Warhol and Pop Art that Martin has repeated on numerous canvasses.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p>One could think here of voodoo practices or summoning the dead with objects from their possession. While the title<span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><em>Dance<\/em><span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span>and the buoyant vocabulary of forms indicate an homage to Henri Matisse \u2013 whose famous equally large-format painting<span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><em>La Danse<\/em>(1909\/1910) depicts five joyously moving women and was also painted as a sort of twin to<span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><em>La Musique<\/em><span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span>(1910) \u2013 Martin\u2019s painting appears as a dance of death, particularly in the context of his work. All the cited painters are deceased. The musicians, on the other hand, are still living. Matisse\u2019s painting is pioneering in formal terms for its reduction down to three colours, with which the interior forms are filled in almost monochromatically. Martin employs the same formal principle. Six sweeping, regularly curved, completely white forms that, seen anthropomorphically, could doubtlessly recall gyrating hips, are encompassed within a monochromatic black field. Their edges are outlined in red, blue, and yellow. In the viewer\u2019s perception, however, the forms seem to rest less on the dark ground than behind it, as if the canvas primed in black and opened six-fold in generous sweeps offers a glimpse of a white light space behind it, whose dimensions remain indeterminable.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p>Martin\u2019s canvas again functions as a threshold between a worldly, in this case particularly socially and culturally definable place, and an intangible dimension that can in turn be characterised as spiritual. With their pointy ends, the white compartments of form are fitted in between the top and bottom edges of the work like Tibetan prayer wheels in their shrine. That such wheels, when turned, spin on their own axes like the row of dancers in Matisse\u2019s painting, reaffirms the comparison between the pictures. But especially the lower base of Martin\u2019s winding forms has been given much significance, while in<span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><em>Dance<\/em>, as well as in all comparable paintings, the upper edge of the picture assists in containing the composition but is itself never addressed. A \u00bbtop\u00ab \u2013 virtually required by Christian iconography and constantly exposed both symbolically and compositionally \u2013 does not exist in Martin\u2019s work. To the extent that his compositions have a formal and energetic base, it is at the bottom, on the ground and absolutely in the dirt, which, as Chris Martin and the title of this<br \/>\nessay says, captures the sun.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p><strong><em>Untitled<\/em>, 2005<\/strong><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p>Pictures with such pulsating forms as in<span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><em>Dance<\/em><span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span>form the largest and most reproduced group of works in Chris Martin\u2019s oeuvre. With very few deviations,<span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><em>Untitled<\/em>from 1988 already follows the same compositional principles. I wish to discuss this group in more detail because numerous individual examples enable a further analogy that is in turn not unfamiliar to Buddhism and closely affiliated especially with Tantric practice. As an example, I would like to discuss a small painting on cardboard,<span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><em>Untitled<\/em><span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span>(2005).<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p>Three forms simultaneously wind their way upward here from the lower edge of the picture, standing out black against a fiery red background. They extend up like flickering tongues of flame, each of them surrounding a different number of more or less white dots: five at the left, fourteen in the middle and seven at the right. Against the backdrop of Martin\u2019s reception of Buddhism, it makes sense to link this energetic picture to Kundalini power. Tantric writings use the Sanskrit term Kundalini to describe the potential in the human being that comes closest to the energy of the earth, the material, and rests like a coiled snake at the base of the spine in the lowest chakra. The most elementary of all human forces can be awakened from there through yoga practices, meditation, and Tantric sexuality, like a fire that climbs up the spine and breaks through one chakra after the other (the white dots in Martin\u2019s picture) to ultimately combine via the crown chakra at the top of the head with the cosmic, spiritual energy \u2013 which corresponds to the state of spiritual transformation, and enlightenment.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p>Not only in Indian Tantra but in Europe as well, a rising snake is one of the oldest symbols of life-giving force. Since Classical antiquity, it can been found as the symbol of medicine and pharmacology in the rod of Asclepius, and even in Gustav Klimt\u2019s famed painting<span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><em>The Medicine<\/em><span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span>(1900\u20131907), a golden snake uncoils in the same way from the base of the spine as in classic Tantric representations. Even in the Old Testament, God sent out fiery serpents against the people of Israel to punish their sins with its bite, which Moses in turn healed with the \u00bbbrazen serpent\u00ab of enlightenment.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p>The fact that Martin, as described above, compositionally always leaves this moment of enlightenment blank underscores the fact that he does not proceed from any fixed spiritual principle, much less from concrete religious concepts which he would care enough about to represent. Admittedly,<span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><em>Untitled<\/em><span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span>depicts the row of the chakras and their connections to each other in a virtually schematic manner by means of the snake or flame-like form at the left. (However, the first chakra is identical to the lower edge of the picture, the seventh with the upper edge \u2013 which the white line that only extends from the first to the sixth chakra does not break through and thus fails to overcome its connection to the material world, symbolised by a horizon line.) At the same time, the arrangement of the white dots in the two black forms further to the right reveals an almost ironic handling of the energy metaphor, to the extent that they make a particularly uncoordinated bubbling impression (and playfully overstep the horizon in the process!).<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p>This brings us to Martin\u2019s mushroom pictures. The earliest I know of dates to 1980 (<em>Psilocybin<\/em>). The motif still recurs regularly in Martin\u2019s work today. Like the Kundalini snake, Martin\u2019s mushrooms always stand on the lower edge of the picture, growing completely from the ground, as expected. As in<span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><em>Untitled<\/em>, five orange red dots run up the stem of a mushroom to its cap in<span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><em>Mushrooms<\/em><span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span>(2004\u20132008). Airily sprayed, white spots are distributed above like spores in a landscape. Another group of mushrooms is connected with an rhizomatic array of lines. Variously coloured dots bead and leap across the whole picture, and titles like<span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><em>Psilocybin<\/em><span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span>leave no doubt about what kind of mushrooms are involved and where the shimmering impression of perception comes from. After all, its active ingredient is greatly heightening the experience of lights, colours, and contrasts and causing them to vibrate. As with LSD, the boundaries of consciousness seem dissolved. And like in Tantra, the self merges with its surroundings.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p>And if alchemistic symbolism has always assumed a central role in Martin\u2019s work (numerology, anagrams, colour theory), it likewise alludes to alchemistic knowledge of the psychological effects of chemical substances and thus optimally suited to Martin\u2019s apparent interest in mind-expanding drugs. Enlightenment as a trip. Mushrooms grow as high as trees in<span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><em>Big Glitter Painting<\/em><span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span>(2009\u20132010) and shine, together with a cloud, neon yellow and orange against a night sky that glistens like cocaine powder. The \u00bbspiritual landscapes\u00ab motif is repeated here this time in the psychedelic merger of nature and the psyche, of the inner and outer landscape.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p><strong><em>Ain\u2019t it funky<\/em>, 2003\u20132010<\/strong><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p>Ever since the horizon line was programmatically introduced in<span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><em>Here<\/em><span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span>in 1986, it has established different perspectives of sight as well as of meaning. The horizon lines lay higher in the picture at times, at other times lower, but over the years they are largely located at the lower edge of the picture where as painted lines they provide a grip on reality in the shape of mushrooms, Kundalini snakes, and other compositions. As could be seen in<span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><em>Dance<\/em>, they often place Martin\u2019s paintings firmly on the feet of concrete cultural and social references that the artist feels close to, thinks about, or admires. He integrates them into the energetic context his pictures invoke with an unconventional, thoroughly profane magic.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p>References to music have dramatically increased in Martin\u2019s work since 2006. The artist has said that James Brown\u2019s death moved him in a way that even he found surprising. Martin grew up in Washington, D.C. as the child of an elitist white family in a Georgetown neighbourhood that now has so many alarm systems and security patrols that Martin describes it as particularly dangerous for that very reason. The traditionally strong black soul and funk culture in Washington meant that the young Martin could broaden his middle-class horizon, and the social emancipatory movements of rap and hip-hop became an alternative culture to his own heritage. In<span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><em>Rev. Al In Mourning<\/em><span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span>(2006\u20132007), a newspaper clipping surrounded by white radiates from the middle of a canvas that has been coarsely painted in black. The clipping shows James Brown and the civil rights activist Reverend Al Sharpton leaving the White House in 1982. Together they wanted to convince President Ronald Reagan to declare Martin Luther King Jr.\u2019s birthday a national holiday. Reverend Al wears black mourning clothes.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p>Martin has dedicated numerous pictures to James Brown since 2006, one of the most beautiful of which is<span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><em>Farewell Godfather of Soul<\/em>\u2026 (2007). Reproduced twice from an album cover, Brown\u2019s face, with a lightning bolt on his chest, is submerged in the depths of a black mass of oil paint, seconded by two delicate clouds on a narrow strip of blue sky. The fusion of spiritual symbolism and political themes is likewise explicit in<span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><em>Motown Music and the Astral Plane<\/em><span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span>(2007\u20132008). Motown, the legendary Detroit album label, is considered the epitome of black emancipation through music. Two-thirds of the canvas has been covered with seven records by James Brown and Michael Jackson. Shimmering colourful lines with which, like in<span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><em>Mushrooms<\/em>, the LPs are connected rhizomatically, veer toward a book under plastic foil at the top of the picture, which bears the title<span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><em>The Astral Plane<\/em>. First published in 1895, the book\u2019s author Charles Webster Leadbeater provides an introduction to theosophical thought that he, openly racist, regards accessible only to whites. Brown and Jackson are bundling their energy in order, so it seems, to banish this book and shoot it into orbit beyond the edge of the picture.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p>In<span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><em>Ain\u2019t It Funky<\/em><span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span>(2003\u20132010) \u2013 the title quotes James Brown\u2019s 1970 album of the same name \u2013 connecting lines can be found between seven LPs. But these are supplemented by collaged pictures of<br \/>\nritual sites, such as temples, and ritual acts. Reproductions of antique vases, a forest fire, a post-Cubist painting by Pablo Picasso (<em>Three Musicians<\/em>, 1921) and other such things can be seen on the edge of the picture. These reference pictures bulge on all sides from the edge of the canvas on their dramatically coloured underpainting, like a curtain toward the centre of the picture primed in black, making it appear like a theatrically staged scene. Tilted from the vertical to the horizontal, the canvas could be turned at any time into a dance floor on which the individual steps are predetermined, as in a ritual choreography. While the horizon line at the bottom is still present, Martin encompasses the energetic constellation in the middle with a no less complex subplot that circulates around the whole picture. In formal terms, the pictorial occurrence is excessive, the contrasts are hard, the brushstrokes coarse.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p>Based on West African traditions, James Brown\u2019s funk music was in fact conceived with ecstatic, ritualistic dance experiences in mind. This often not only blurred the boundary between the auditorium and stage but also suspended corporeal perception in the flow of the music, animating a rhythmic merger of the self with its exterior. In<span class=\"apple-converted-space\">\u00a0<\/span><em>Ain\u2019t It Funky<\/em>, Martin again very unmistakably underscores his pursuit of spiritual dynamics amidst cultural practices, objects, and symbols from diverse provenances. His pictures bind them together without hierarchies and amidst a social world that his painting feels beholden to, sometimes devoutly, sometimes solidarily, sometimes critically. He recently intensely seized on the art of the so-called self-taught artists from the southern United States, who are \u2013 less politically correctly \u2013 also called outsider artists. They live on the outskirts of America\u2019s affluent society and with their rubbish make sculptures and pictures that approach African sculpture and cult objects. Martin attaches greater significance to that which is dismissed as \u00bbfolklore\u00ab by the upper echelon of aesthetics than to the canonised celebrations of so-called high culture.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p><span lang=\"EN-US\">The transitory nature of the moment, of the body, of identity, the fleetingness of existence at the threshold of death, the nothingness of the material, are the great themes in Martin\u2019s oeuvre. But for me, the most important thing is that he never complains about this finiteness, affirming it instead. To be sure, this occurs more reverentially in his early works than in his later paintings in which the respect for the thematic is not lost, but comprehended less generally and especially increasingly less abstract. I have chosen the term \u00bbspiritual abstraction\u00ab for the title of this essay, and by this I primarily mean the term for a genre of painting that since Hilma af Klint has devoted itself to the representation of metaphysical contents with non-representational means. The fact is \u2013 and that is what I am trying to demonstrate \u2013 that Martin\u2019s paintings are highly grounded in the physis, in nature, sometimes with almost comic-like figurativeness, and they have the great advantage of not subjugating themselves to any metaphysical concept. They stand with both feet planted firmly on the social reality of their author who, despite being the subject of his work, hardly brings himself into play.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p><span lang=\"EN-US\">In Martin\u2019s art, spirituality first and foremost has an empathic, in fact solidary character. In 2008, Chris Martin completed a picture that bears an inscription on the lower edge reading \u00bbA painting for the protection of Amy Winehouse\u00ab (<em>For Amy Winehouse<\/em>, 2004\u20132008). Martin draped a protective wall made out Kleenex tissues\/fabric around a portrait of the singer who suffered from alcohol and drug addiction, encircling it with goggle eyes symbolising the public\u2019s greedy glances. He pasted a candy cane for her onto the picture. <\/span>After Winehouse\u2019s death in 2011, it appears like a funerary object.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>First published in: Gregor Jansen: Chris Martin, Staring Into The Sun, Kunsthalle D\u00fcsseldorf, Verlag der Buchhandlung Walther K\u00f6nig, D\u00fcsseldorf, 2011<\/p>\n<p>On the occasion of Chris Martin&#8217;s first survey exhibition, this essay brought together central themes of his oeuvre. A thorough reception of Martin&#8217;s work, which dates back to the 1980s, only began in the 2010s. Based on conversations with the New York painter, the text was able to present much of the content and background in a compact way for the first time.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":3,"featured_media":888,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"rop_custom_images_group":[],"rop_custom_messages_group":[],"rop_publish_now":"initial","rop_publish_now_accounts":[],"rop_publish_now_history":[],"rop_publish_now_status":"pending","footnotes":""},"categories":[7],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-631","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-texts","entry"],"translation":{"provider":"WPGlobus","version":"3.0.2","language":"en","enabled_languages":["de","en"],"languages":{"de":{"title":true,"content":true,"excerpt":true},"en":{"title":true,"content":true,"excerpt":true}}},"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/alexanderkoch.info\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/631","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/alexanderkoch.info\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/alexanderkoch.info\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/alexanderkoch.info\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/3"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/alexanderkoch.info\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=631"}],"version-history":[{"count":19,"href":"https:\/\/alexanderkoch.info\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/631\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":633,"href":"https:\/\/alexanderkoch.info\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/631\/revisions\/633"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/alexanderkoch.info\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/888"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/alexanderkoch.info\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=631"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/alexanderkoch.info\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=631"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/alexanderkoch.info\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=631"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}