Elizabeth Peyton's work was immediately well-received in the early 1990s and plays an important part in the renewal of figurative painting. Her first New York exhibition in 1993, at the legendary Chelsea Hotel marks a turning point in her career. Her small format portraits show a remarkable pictorial proficiency, quick, sharp strokes, a knack for colour partly inspired by David Hockney's drawings. In these works we can discern the originality of her project: a real fascination for stars and their auras, for beauty and adolescence, an obsession that intersects with Warhol and contemporary society, haunted by the impossibility of a return to youth. Her portrait gallery, created from this seminal impulse, is populated by young men, mainly models that she chooses among her friends, historical figures taken from the European monarchy, as well as popular celebrities. These paintings, executed in oils in thick, rapid, and colourful strokes, always originate from a photograph. The artist begins by painting the details of the drawing before applying a base coat, always uses the same small formats (canvas et especially cardboard which she first coats in order to accept paint) and names her paintings by no more than the first name of the depicted character. Her portrait of Kurt Cobain, with a certain likeness to renaissance cherubs, reveals the intensity, emotion, with which she seeks to elevate a specific moment in the destiny of her subjects, their ideal beauty, that ambiguous space between intimacy and the voyeurism inherent in public life. In some ways anticipating the public's obsession with the private lives of celebrities, she integrates the phenomenon of fetishization, while avoiding the distance, the critical and discursive dimension that would normally be attributed to it. In talking about her work and her use of photography, the painter says: "Trying to imagine the image of an image, to capture what's hiding behind the expression. Everything happens so quickly on a face and disappears immediately. Photos can't do anything about it. In the mind, in memory, maybe, but that's different. I think faces can reveal everything."
Stéphanie MOISDON