Peter Doig
22-Jul-2010
Peter Doig's paintings have a tendency to disorientate us, even when they depict recognisable imagery such as figures and buildings.
Born in Edinburgh in 1959, Peter Doig now lives and works in Trinidad. A
professor at Düsseldorf State Academy of Art since 2005, Doig has had
major solo exhibitions at Tate Britain (2008), touring to Musée d'Art
moderne de la Ville de Paris and Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt, Dallas
Museum of Art (2005), Pinakothek Der Moderne, Munich (2004),
Bonnenfanten Museum, Maastricht (2003) and Whitechapel Art Gallery,
London (1998). Doig was nominated for the Turner Prize in 1994.
Peter Doig's paintings have a tendency to disorientate us, even when
they depict recognisable imagery such as figures and buildings. We are
often plunged into an unreliable world of reflections, sometimes
literally when we are presented with the icy lakes and watery depths
that feature in paintings such as Swamped, 1990, and Window Pane,
1993, but more often in a metaphorical sense - the mirror image of
memory or fantasy. Doig invites us to consider the status of the people,
places and events that populate his pictures, whether they exist in
private or public realms, in personal or shared experiences. The refuges
and defences against nature often seen in Doig's work are a kind of
visual corollary for such considerations. We might also see in them an
artist measuring the gaps between thought and language, painting as an
individual pursuit and a shared experience.
