2010.28, Karel Funk, Untitled #21, 2006


GENERAL DESCRIPTION  
Karel Funk’s meticulously painted portraits both embrace and defy notions of portraiture. Traditionally, a portrait articulates the visual facts that define a specific individual. In Funk’s hands, this model is inverted, and the “portrait” becomes a vehicle for questioning the specificity of identity. His paintings omit the face of his subject, turning the lack of individuality into the focus of his painting.

The subjects of Funk’s hyper-real portraits are most typically male, usually acquaintances or friends. The artist selects his models, purchases their outerwear, and poses them in his studio, where they are digitally photographed against uniformly white backdrops. Then, working from a high-resolution computer screen displaying the digital image, he constructs his painting over a period of weeks or months, carefully building layer upon layer of acrylic glazes. The acrylic paint is treated like egg tempera; this painstaking attention to detail and precise brushwork are elements that root his paintings firmly in the history of portraiture, connecting his work technically with the process of Renaissance masters such as Hans Holbein and Agnolo Bronzino.

Excerpt from
Jeffrey Grove, DMA Label copy, Variations on Theme: Contemporary Art 1950s - Present, 2012.

NOTES
did not get object file, provenance and other tms work incomplete, HAB


Catalogue essays

Artist/designers

Cultures

Geography 

Process/materials

Historical periods

Individuals

Subject terms

RELATED OBJECTS 

PROVENANCE 

AUDIO ASSETS 

VIDEO ASSETS

IMAGE ASSETS

WEB RESOURCES 
  • W Magazine~Read more about artist Karel Funk.
  • YouTube~Watch a short documentary following the completion of one Funk painting from start to finish

ARCHIVAL RESOURCES

FUN FACTS

TEACHING IDEAS

RULES
Apply to objects where number equals 2010.28

Category
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General Description
 
Karel Funk’s meticulously painted portraits both embrace and defy notions of portraiture. Traditionally, a portrait articulates the visual facts that define a specific individual. In Funk’s hands, this model is inverted, and the “portrait” becomes a vehicle for questioning the specificity of identity. His paintings omit the face of his subject, turning the lack of individuality into the focus of his painting.

The subjects of Funk’s hyper-real portraits are most typically male, usually acquaintances or friends. The artist selects his models, purchases their outerwear, and poses them in his studio, where they are digitally photographed against uniformly white backdrops. Then, working from a high-resolution computer screen displaying the digital image, he constructs his painting over a period of weeks or months, carefully building layer upon layer of acrylic glazes. The acrylic paint is treated like egg tempera; this painstaking attention to detail and precise brushwork are elements that root his paintings firmly in the history of portraiture, connecting his work technically with the process of Renaissance masters such as Hans Holbein and Agnolo Bronzino.

Excerpt from
Jeffrey Grove, DMA Label copy, Variations on Theme: Contemporary Art 1950s - Present, 2012.

Fun Facts

Archival Resources

Web Resources
 
  • W Magazine~Read more about artist Karel Funk.
  • YouTube~Watch a short documentary following the completion of one Funk painting from start to finish

Notes
did not get object file, provenance and other tms work incomplete, HAB


Catalogue essays

Artist/designers

Cultures

Geography 

Process/materials

Historical periods

Individuals

Subject terms

RELATED OBJECTS 

PROVENANCE 

AUDIO ASSETS 

VIDEO ASSETS

rules
Apply To
Objects
number
Equals
2010.28
tags
#draft
#completed
%copyedited_Gail
@Bowling
%Archived
green (color): AAT: 300128438
painting (image-making): AAT: 300054216
*Contemporary Art
texture (artistic concept): AAT: 300400862
%TMS pending
back views: AAT: 300264745
round (shape): AAT: 300121969
portrait: AAT: 300015637
identity: AAT: 300257052
winter (season): AAT: 300133101
coats (garments): AAT: 300046143
jackets (garments / saco / chaqueta): AAT: 300046167
photorealist: AAT: 300022201
source file
object_notes_1_b-0109.xml.nores