By Karsten Ohrt, Director of Kunsthallen Brandts Klaedefabrik, host of the
Danish 'Stand Up To Be Discontinued'.
In 1990, Kunsthallen Brandts Klaedefabrik organized a large retrospective exhibition
Rockens Billeder (Images of Rock), which contained works of European and American
artists from the previous three decades. The exhibition included works dealing
with the theme of rock music, as well as works by painters who were also practising
musicians. One of the most memorable expressive works at the exhibition was the
1986 painting Crepe and Black Lamps by Don van Vliet. The composition of the picture
is glaringly asymmetrical, with rolling, light, fluid human figures lining the
lefthand side of the canvas and a compact, blue-black female figure with a disproportionally
large head standing in the right half of the picture. The naked woman is leaning
forward, out towards the onlooker. She has a black, spiky punk hairstyle and red,
dilated eyes. Her face is heavily lined and distorted like a mask concealing dark
powers. Her entire being conveys a mixture of uncontrolled hatred and paralysed
dread. This raven figure can be seen as Don van Vliet's view of the world of rock
and the picture as a whole as an expression of the artist's experience of people
and their relationships in general. At the exhibition Rockens Billeder it was
also possible to look at a wide range of works by other artists who sang the praises
of musicians and concert-life in their various ways Don van Vliet's paintings
probably provided the weightiest counterbalance to this eulogy. At the same time
as Don van Vliet depicts the human stage with both fear and disdain like, for
example, in Crepe and Black Lamps he also allows animals to invade the world of
his motifs: huge, fearful beasts as well as tiny, gentle frisking creatures appear
in ever greater numbers and begin to contend for space with the nerve-ridden humans
in the artist's canvases. In many instances his pictures become more harmonious
and peaceful, although still full of life, when his expressive emblems are centred
on animal motifs than when he has his fellow men - or rather his foemen - as his
theme. In recent years the world of nature and animals has taken centre stage
in his paintings.
It is natural to see Don van Vliet's development as a pictorial artist as being
closely linked to his life as a musician and a poet. This versatile person has
often been characterised as an outsider or 'loner' in relation to the cultural
establishment, something which seems obvious when his unusually high developed
synaesthetic talents are taken into consideration. Van Vliet seems to have no
inner boundaries between experiencing in words, sounds or images. Not only does
he combine colours so that you can almost hear them; the titles of his pictures
are sound images that interact - or associate -with his pictures, rather as the
colour green and the sound of a tuba can be associated by an artistically gifted
child with a day of the week, such as Wednesday.
It seems perfectly natural for a person with senses as open as Don van Vliet's
to have moved on from a highly extrovert art form like rock music to the more
introvert and in one sense lonely world of pictorial art. For all his artistic
work displays an ambiguity which creates tensions of mood that range from the
ecstatic to the downright sinister. An ambivalent relationship to the outside
world which must make it infinitely easier to work in solitude with brush and
canvas, rather than surrounded by an audience. Painting allows Don van Vliet to
immerse himself in the world of nature and animals with which he is so taken up;
a far cry from the endless succession of monotonous hotel rooms and hordes of
fans that are part of a rock musician's life when on tour. When Don van Vliet
paints, he pursues relentlessly his own deep experiences of the dichotomy between
the beautiful, ordered chaos of nature and animal life on the one hand and the
culture-distorted, morally degenerated world of man on the other.
The 1990 exhibition Rockens Billeder has presented Don van Vliet to a Scandinavian
audience for the first time. It was in that context that Kunsthallen Brandts Klaedefabrik
began to plan a larger separate presentation of this exciting artist to people
visiting exhibitions in the Nordic countries. And so it is with great pleasure
that we - in a cooperation with Galerie Michael Werner, Cologne, Bielefelder Kunstverein
and The Royal Pavilion Art Gallery, Brighton - are now able to put his work on
show on Danish soil.