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Rose Wylie

Grumpy Girl

Four colour hand drawn lithograph on Somerset Satin white 300gsm 
84.1 x 59.7 cm 
Edition of 40 + 15 APs
Hand signed and numbered by the artist

Current price £2,600 (incl. VAT) 
Please note that for this edition, prices will rise as the edition starts to sell out.

In 2017 the Serpentine presented the works of acclaimed British artist Rose Wylie. She finds inspiration for her visually compelling paintings through her daily encounters and a variety of sources, from art history, cinema, comic books and the natural world to news, verbal anecdotes, celebrity stories and sport. Wylie often paints through the filter of memory and impression, using text to enhance facts and recollections, and editing images by overlaying new pieces of canvas over images, like a collage. Rose Wylie has generously donated this limited edition to the Serpentine Galleries on the occasion of the Serpentine's 50th anniversary.

Courtesy of the artist, Choi&Lager and David Zwirner

Photo: Jo Moon Price & William Ford

 

Rose Wylie

See more products by   Rose Wylie

Rose Wylie (b. 1934, UK) is a contemporary painter whose work only began to receive attention and critical acclaim late in her life. Wylie works on large-scale canvases using cartoonish, child-like imagery rendered in expressive marks, sometimes inspired by art history or pop culture such as movies and television.

Wylie finds inspiration for her visually compelling paintings through her daily encounters and a variety of sources, from art history, cinema, comic books and the natural world to news, verbal anecdotes, celebrity stories and sport. These might include a scene from Quentin Tarantino’s iconic Kill Bill films, a self-portrait of Wylie eating a chocolate biscuit or a football match. Her vibrant, large-scale canvases filled the walls of the Serpentine North Gallery.

Quack Quack  included paintings dating from the late 1990s to the present day – some never previously exhibited, including a new group of works inspired by Hyde Park and Kensington Gardens. One, based on Wylie’s childhood memories of living in Bayswater during the Blitz, maps the park’s landscape – dogs, ducks, the Serpentine Lake and both the historic building and Zaha Hadid’s present day extension of the Gallery – with memories of Spitfires and Messerschmitt planes fighting overhead. The exhibition title connected similarly to place as well as to ‘ack-ack’, a term used to describe Second World War anti-aircraft artillery.

Wylie often paints through the filter of memory and impression, using text to enhance facts and recollections and editing images by overlaying new pieces of canvas over images, like a collage. At times, the compositions of her paintings are informed by cinematic techniques, whether the multiple headshots of Sitting on a Bench with Border (Film Notes)  2008, based on Pedro Almodóvar’s 2006 film Volver,  or Wylie’s two paintings from the 2005 film Syriana,  which take in a panoramic and close-up shot of the same scene.

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