Jenny Saville

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Jenny Saville
File:Torso2.jpg
Torso 2 (2004), oil on canvas, Saatchi Gallery
Born (1970-05-07) 7 May 1970 (age 53)
Cambridge, England
Nationality British
Known for Painting
Movement Young British Artists

Jenny Saville (born 7 May 1970)[1] is a contemporary British painter associated with the Young British Artists. She is known for her large-scale painted depictions of nude women. Saville works and lives in Oxford, England.[2]

Early life and education

Saville was born on 7 May 1970 in Cambridge, England.[1] Saville went to the Lilley and Stone School (now The Grove School Specialist Science College) in Newark, Nottinghamshire, for her secondary education, later gaining her degree at Glasgow School of Art (1988–1992), and was then awarded a six-month scholarship to the University of Cincinnati where she states that she saw "Lots of big women. Big white flesh in shorts and T-shirts. It was good to see because they had the physicality that I was interested in" - a physicality that she partially credits to Pablo Picasso, an artist that she sees as a painter that made subjects as if "they were solidly there....not fleeting".[3]

Career

At the end of her postgraduate education, the leading British art collector, Charles Saatchi, purchased her senior show. He offered the artist an 18-month contract, supporting her while she created new works to be exhibited in the Saatchi Gallery in London. The collection, Young British Artists III, exhibited in 1994 with Saville's self portrait, Plan, as the signature piece. [4] Rising quickly to critical and public recognition in part through Saatchi’s patronage, Saville has been noted for creating art through the use of a classical standard—figure painting. Although Saville’s chosen method is traditional, she has found a way to reinvent figure painting and regain its position in the context of art history. Known primarily for her large-scale paintings of nude women, Saville has also emerged as a Young British Artist (YBA). Much of her work features distorted flesh, high-caliber brush strokes and patches of oil color, while others reveal the surgeon’s mark of a plastic surgery operation. In 1994, Saville spent many hours observing plastic surgery operations in New York City.[5]

Saville has dedicated her career to traditional figurative oil painting. Her painterly style has been compared to that of Lucian Freud[6] and Rubens. Her paintings are usually much larger than life size. They are strongly pigmented and give a highly sensual impression of the surface of the skin as well as the mass of the body. She sometimes adds marks onto the body, such as white "target" rings.

Since her debut in 1992, Saville's focus has remained on the female body, slightly deviating into subjects with "floating or indeterminant gender," painting large scale paintings of transgender people. Her published sketches and documents include surgical photographs of liposuction, trauma victims, deformity correction, disease states and transgender patients.[7]

Select works

  • Branded (1992). Oil painting on a 7' × 6' canvas. In this painting, Saville painted her own face onto an obese female body. The size of the breasts and midsection is very exaggerated. The figure in the painting is holding folds of her skin which she is seemingly showing off.[8]
  • Plan (1993). Oil painting on a 9' × 7' canvas. This painting depicts a nude female figure with contour lines marked on her body, much like that of a topographical map. Saville said of this work: "The lines on her body are the marks they make before you have liposuction done to you. They draw these things that look like targets. I like this idea of mapping of the body, not necessarily areas to be cut away, but like geographical contours on a map. I didn't draw on to the body. I wanted the idea of cutting into the paint. Like you would cut into the body. It evokes the idea of surgery. It has lots of connotations."[9]
  • Fulcrum (1999). Oil painting on an 8 1/2' × 16' canvas. In this painting, three obese women are piled on a medical trolley. Thin vertical strips of tape have been painted over and then pulled off the canvas, thus creating a sense of geometric measure at odds with the mountainous flesh.[10]
  • Hem (1999). Oil painting on a 10' x 7'canvas. This painting depicts a very large nude female with lots of subtle textures implied. The bits of orange showing through the stomach add a glow, while the figure's left side is covered with thick white paint as if by a plaster cast, and her pubic area, painted pink over dark brown, resembles carved painted wood.[10]
  • Hybrid (1997). Oil painting on a 7' × 6' canvas. In this painting, the image looks much like patchwork. Different components of four female bodies are incorporated together to create a unique piece.[9]
  • Ruben's Flap (1998–1999). Oil painting on a 10' × 8' canvas. This painting depicts Saville herself; she multiplies her body, letting it fill the canvas space as it does in other works, but what is interesting is the fragmentation. Decisive lines divide the body into square planes, and it appears that she is trying to hide the nakedness with the different planes. Saville seems to be struggling to convince herself that the parts of her body are beautiful.[11]
  • Matrix (1999). Oil painting on a 7' × 10' canvas. In this painting, Saville depicts a reclining nude figure with female breasts and genitalia, but with a masculine, bearded face. The genitalia are thrust to the foreground, making them much more of a focus in the picture than the gaze. The arms and legs of the figure are only partly seen, the extremities lying outside the boundary of the picture. The whole is painted in fairly naturalistic fleshy tones.[12]
  • Saville also created a series of photographs known as Closed Contact (1995–1996). She collaborated with artist Glen Luchford to create a series of C-prints depicting a larger female nude lying on plexiglas. The photos were taken from underneath the glass and depict the female figure very distorted.[9]

Cover art

Saville's painting Strategy (South Face/Front Face/North Face) appeared on the cover of Manic Street Preachers' third album The Holy Bible.[13] Stare (2005) was used for the cover of the Manic's 2009 album Journal for Plague Lovers.[14] This album cover placed second in a 2009 poll for Best Art Vinyl.[15]

Exhibitions

  • Cooling Gallery, London, 1993, when Saatchi bought all her works.
  • The controversial 'Sensation' exhibition at the Royal Academy of Art (1997) suddenly brought Saville's work to the attention of the British public at large.
  • In 2002, she collaborated with photographer Glen Luchford to produce huge Polaroids of herself taken from below, lying on a sheet of glass.
  • "Continuum", 15 September - 22 October 2011 - Gagosian Gallery, New York City
  • Norton’s RAW series – Recognition of Art by Women 15 November 2011 – 4 March 2012 Norton Museum of Art, West Palm Beach Florida
  • Jenny Saville's first UK solo exhibition was held at Modern Art Oxford 23 June – 16 September 2012.[16][17]
  • 'Jenny Saville Drawing' forms the final section of the 'Titian to Canaletto: Drawing in Venice' exhibition at the Ashmolean Museum, 15 October 2015 – 10 January 2016. Twenty new works on paper and canvas were produced in response to the Venetian drawings in the exhibition.[18]

Notes and references

  1. 1.0 1.1 Royal Academy of Arts: Jenny Saville RA | Artist | Royal Academy of Arts, accessdate: 29/08/2014
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  3. "Jenny Saville Biography". Artbank.com. Retrieved on 5 February 2008.
  4. "SAVILLE, Jenny." Benezit Dictionary of Artists. Oxford Art Online. Oxford University Press. Web. 24 Sep. 2015. <http://www.oxfordartonline.com/subscriber/article/benezit/B00300069>.
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  7. Schama, Simon. "Jenny Saville". The Saatchi Gallery, 2005. Retrieved on 6 February 2008.
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  13. Middles, Mick. "Manic Street Preachers". London: Omnibus Press, January 2000. p.136. ISBN 0-7119-7738-0
  14. Rogers, Georgie & O'Doherty, Lucy. "Supermarkets cover up Manics CD ". BBC News, 2009. Retrieved on 28 June 2009.
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External links