521W26
3rd Floor

Daniel Heidkamp

Amphora

 – , 2020

 

Pace Prints is pleased to present Amphora, an exhibition of unique cut paper works by Daniel Heidkamp. This is the artist’s third exhibition with the gallery. Amphora will be on view November 19 — December 19 at Pace Prints, 521 West 26th Street.

In Antiquity, the amphora was a storage vessel, used to carry goods, especially wine, across varying terrain and sea. Adopted by Heidkamp as a symbol for this body of work, Amphora bridges imagery from the Calanques region of Southern France to the dramatic domes and cliffs of Yosemite National Park. Contained in this metaphorical vessel are thoughts about sublime landscape, simultaneous yet divergent 20th century art movements, with colors influenced by and directly related to these natural settings.

Heidkamp’s Night Camps pay homage to the work of early American photographer Carleton Watkins, who brought a large-format stereoscopic camera into Yosemite Valley in 1860, creating some of the first images of the region. These highly detailed black and white images served as inspiration for countless artists over the decades, establishing a new uniquely American relationship to the landscape. At the same time, in the limestone hills and Calanques in Marseille, France, Paul Cézanne was beginning to establish a new way to see the landscape which would ultimately lay the groundwork for Cubism. Heidkamp’s The Torpilleur (Calanque de Sugiton) captures his own response to that landscape, where Cubist shapes seem to appear in the striation of the rocks and the blocky shadows under the bending pine trees. He says, “In both Yosemite and the Riviera, surreal, new colors burst forth throughout like in the aqua pools in sea caverns, with Neolithic markings, painted stripes on sailboats, or rainbows of waterfall spray clinging to granite bedrock.”

Amphora is the artist’s second project focused entirely on hand-cut collages. Heidkamp builds the surfaces of rugged French cliffs and American landscapes by layering richly pigmented Canson papers, originally produced in France beginning in 1557. Using every possible tone and tint in their gamut, he thinks of the options as his painter’s palette; their names, such as Bordeaux, Moonstone and Tobacco, take on a poetic imperative, representing the French landscape which first inspired them.

Heidkamp created this body of work in his Sunset Park, Brooklyn studio during the COVID-19 pandemic. He states “…[creating] in this time of quarantine can provide a space for the mind to travel when the body cannot. And I think looking to nature, looking to land, provides a sense of foundation and permanence when so much is uncertain.”

Daniel Heidkamp was born in Wakefield, Massachusetts in 1980 and lives and works in Brooklyn, New York. He has had solo exhibitions at Half Gallery and White Columns in New York City, Loyal Gallery in Stockholm, Sweden, and has been featured in numerous group exhibitions internationally, including Blum and Poe, Los Angeles, CA; the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; The Journal, Brooklyn, NY; Cleopatra’s Brooklyn, NY; Marlborough Gallery, Spain; and Zach Feuer, New York, NY. Heidkamp graduated with a BFA in Painting from the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston and is represented by Half Gallery in New York City and Loyal Gallery in Stockholm, Sweden.

Visitor Information
This exhibition is no longer on view.

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