Not on display
- Artist
- Tomma Abts born 1967
- Medium
- Oil paint and acrylic paint on canvas
- Dimensions
- Support: 480 × 380 mm
- Collection
- Tate
- Acquisition
- Purchased 2006
- Reference
- T12275
Summary
In Noeme 2004 red and blue lines form circular shapes that, where they intersect and seemingly overlap each other, create the suggestion of three-dimensional forms in space. The subtle modulation of the lines also evokes a play of light within the pictorial space, though the imagery – distantly suggestive of atomic or astronomical diagrams – remains resolutely nonfigurative.
Since 1998 the German-born and London-based artist Tomma Abts has worked with the same sized canvas, measuring forty-eight by thirty-eight centimetres. To make paintings such as Noeme she covers the surface of the small canvas (which she props on a lectern or cradles in one arm) with layers of paint until she finds the forms with which she wants to work. Abts often returns to her paintings over a period of time, carefully working and reworking their surfaces. Frequently the underlying colours remain visible, glimpsed through later layers of paint.
Abts has claimed that she wants to produce an art devoid of all symbolism, and that she wants her paintings to be encountered in their own right, with no hidden imagery or meaning to be discovered. As she explained in a 2004 conversation with the painter Peter Doig, ‘the forms don’t stand for anything else, they don’t symbolise anything or describe anything outside of the painting. They represent themselves’ (‘Peter Doig/Tomma Abts’, in Tomma Abts, exhibition catalogue, Galerie Daniel Buchholz, Cologne 2006, p.14). In common with many abstract artists, her choice of title does not seek to ‘explain’ the work. Noeme, like the titles of all her other paintings, was selected from a German dictionary of first names.
In recent years a renewed interest in painting among contemporary artists and critics has led to debates around the continuing possibilities and viability of painting in the twenty-first century. Art historian David Joselit has argued that the best contemporary painting avoids being stuck as an outmoded form through its engagement with a range of ‘transitive’ networks, where the painting’s meaning, form, materials and status remain open to change within each new situation (David Joselit, ‘Painting Beside Itself’, October, no.130, Fall 2009, pp.125–34). Tate curator Mark Godfrey has suggested that a viewer may recognise ‘the networked world’ in Abts’s paintings, but that her meditative work also offers painting as ‘an alternative realm’ to ‘ceaseless networking, communicating, and passage’. While many of Abts’s compositions are, like Noeme, ‘based on nodes, vectors, arrows that seem to form diagrams or networks’, it is indicative, he has written, ‘that the lines break apart or only connect to themselves’ (Mark Godfrey, ‘Tomma Abts’, in Wilson 2013, pp.11–17).
Noeme was displayed as part of Abts’s solo show at Kunsthalle Basel, Switzerland, in 2005. On the strength of that show, and an exhibition at Greengrassi in London, she was nominated for, and subsequently won, the 2006 Turner Prize, awarded annually to an artist under the age of fifty working in Britain. In 2006 Noeme became the first painting by Abts to be acquired by Tate, and in 2008 it appeared at her first solo show in the United States at the New Museum of Contemporary Art, New York.
Further reading
Suzanne Hudson, ‘The Best Laid Plans: On Accidentally Not Reading Tomma Abts’, Parkett, no.84, 2008, pp.18–23.
Tomma Abts, exhibition catalogue, New Museum of Contemporary Art, New York 2008, reproduced p.79.
Andrew Wilson (ed.), Painting Now: Five Contemporary Artists, exhibition catalogue, Tate Britain, London 2013, pp.10–25, reproduced p.16.
Jo Applin
February 2014
Supported by Christie’s.
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