Provenance
The artist
Art & Public, Geneva
Private collection, Switzerland
Pierre Huber, Geneva
Skarstedt Gallery, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owner
Exhibited
New York, Skarstedt Gallery, Steven Parrino: Paintings & Drawings, 1986-2003, May-July 2019, pp. 26-27 (illustrated in color).
Loic's two cents
- Steven Parrino is best known for his series of “misshaped canvases” — monochromes such as Screw Ball that have been folded and twisted beyond the stretcher, revealing the raw canvas and stripe of white primer.
- Parrino’s art is a reaction to the 1980s dictum “Painting is Dead".
- While Parrino’s art and music have generally been associated with the punk counterculture and nihilism, Parrino’s radical innovations in performance art, video, and painting stem out of a deep understand of the history of art and the avant-garde.
- Even though Parrino was considered to be a relatively prolific artist during his lifetime, due to his tragic death in 2005 at the age of 46, his works are considered to be rather scarce.
Catalogue Notes
"Radicality comes from context and not necessarily form. The forms are radical in memory, by way of continuing the once radical, through extensions of its history. The avant-garde leaves a wake and, through mannerist force, continues forward. Even on the run, we sometimes look over our shoulders, approaching art with intuition rather than strategy. Art of this kind is more cult than culture.”
--Steven Parrino
Seeking to reinvigorate painting during an era where many artists and critics were anticipating its demise, Screw Ball is among Steven Parrino’s most recognizable formats. Seething with energy, Parrino’s “misshaped canvases” combine a sleek monochromaticism with the physicality of destruction—colliding Minimalism with Abstract Expressionism. Merging Parrino’s distinctly punk counterculture mentality with astute formalism, the “misshaped canvases” were executed at the peak of the artist’s influential, yet relatively short, career. Here, what was once a large yellow canvas has been transformed through Parrino’s own brutal intervention into a dwindling, yet voluptuous mass of surface and form. Divided into two distinct sections, Screw Ball reveals the total physicality of painting, where baroque yellow drapes are juxtaposed by the manipulated outer edges that revealing what lies beyond the stretcher bar—a strip of white primer and the artist’s unprimed canvas—only a few drips of yellow trickling down the paintings natural expanse divulge the artist’s process. The effect is both lush and nihilistic, sharp and coolly serious.
By breaking up and violating the very medium of painting, Parrino delves into an extensive modernist linearity of negating pictorial illusionism, non-flat abstraction, and emotional domain painting often occupies. Returning to the core of artistic media over half a century after Kazimir Malevich’s Black Square promoted the end of painting and several decades after Frank Stella questioned the shape of the support itself, Parrino proceeded to examine the very essence of abstraction. Whereas Stella worked on the flatness of the surface alone, Parrino completely uproots it, propelling the exteriority of painting into a three-dimensional, atmosphere-shattering character, so that neither painting nor sculpture is securely defined. This destructive approach was infamously summarized by Parrino in one of his ‘NO’ texts. “When I started making paintings,” Parrino roared, “the word on painting was PAINTING IS DEAD. I saw this as an interesting place for painting … death can be refreshing, so I started engaging in necrophilia … approaching history in the same way that Dr. Frankenstein approaches body parts” (S. Parrino, The No Texts, New Jersey, 2003, p. 43). This macabre attitude reflects an artist engrossed in ‘post-punk existentialism’, and is visually reflected in works such as the present lot, which distill Parrino’s distinctly aggressive intervention, so that his rapid performative action is captured and suspended in time and form (ibid.).