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'''Bernard Frize''' (born 1949, [[Saint-Mandé]], France) is a [[France|French]] painter who works in a variety of materials and utilizes a multitude of techniques. As an artist he explores the bare [[minimalism|minimal]] essence of painting, devoid of conception and [[aesthetic]], instead focusing on an industrial approach to making art.<ref>Frize, B. "Bernard Frize: Size Matters", ''Actes Sud (Nimes)'', 1999.</ref> His work is highly process-oriented, often requiring unconventional tools, materials, and the assistance of others to complete a painting.<ref>Frize, B., Grosse, K., Serra, R., "Parkett No. 74", ''Parkett'', 2005.</ref>
'''Bernard Frize''' (born 1954, [[Saint-Mandé]], France) is a [[France|French]] painter who works in a variety of materials and utilizes a multitude of techniques. As an artist he explores the bare [[minimalism|minimal]] essence of painting, devoid of conception and [[aesthetic]], instead focusing on an industrial approach to making art.<ref>Frize, B. "Bernard Frize: Size Matters", ''Actes Sud (Nimes)'', 1999.</ref> His work is highly process-oriented, often requiring unconventional tools, materials, and the assistance of others to complete a painting.<ref>Frize, B., Grosse, K., Serra, R., "Parkett No. 74", ''Parkett'', 2005.</ref>


Frize looks at a painting as a search for an agreement between "nature", a viewer and a flat surface. He states at an interview with Jane Peterson, a journalist, "This is what my paintings are about and why they are not about the process. Nevertheless, the process is a way of engaging the viewer in a kind of simultaneity." <ref>Peppiatt, Michael., Peterson, Jane A., "Art Plural: Voices of Contemporary Art", ''Gatehouse'', 2013.</ref>
Frize looks at a painting as a search for an agreement between "nature", a viewer and a flat surface. He states at an interview with Jane Peterson, a journalist, "This is what my paintings are about and why they are not about the process. Nevertheless, the process is a way of engaging the viewer in a kind of simultaneity." <ref>Peppiatt, Michael., Peterson, Jane A., "Art Plural: Voices of Contemporary Art", ''Gatehouse'', 2013.</ref>

Revision as of 02:36, 27 September 2015

Bernard Frize (born 1954, Saint-Mandé, France) is a French painter who works in a variety of materials and utilizes a multitude of techniques. As an artist he explores the bare minimal essence of painting, devoid of conception and aesthetic, instead focusing on an industrial approach to making art.[1] His work is highly process-oriented, often requiring unconventional tools, materials, and the assistance of others to complete a painting.[2]

Frize looks at a painting as a search for an agreement between "nature", a viewer and a flat surface. He states at an interview with Jane Peterson, a journalist, "This is what my paintings are about and why they are not about the process. Nevertheless, the process is a way of engaging the viewer in a kind of simultaneity." [3]

Frize's artworks have been exhibited extensively across Europe and the UK (Ikon Gallery in Birmingham, as one example), as well as recently in the United States. He is represented by the Galerie Emmanuel Perrotin in Paris and Miami, Simon Lee Gallery in London and Galerie Nächst St. Stephan in Vienna.

Frize lives and works in Paris, France as well as Berlin, Germany.

References

  1. ^ Frize, B. "Bernard Frize: Size Matters", Actes Sud (Nimes), 1999.
  2. ^ Frize, B., Grosse, K., Serra, R., "Parkett No. 74", Parkett, 2005.
  3. ^ Peppiatt, Michael., Peterson, Jane A., "Art Plural: Voices of Contemporary Art", Gatehouse, 2013.

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