Acquisition
1986

Julian Schnabel
American, born 1951
The Wind, 1985
Spray enamel and modeling paste on tarpaulin
177 x 223 in. (449.6 x 566.4 cm)
The Artist
currently on display at the
Art Institute of Chicago
Julian Schnabel's figurative and abstract images, drawn from a wide variety of literary and art historical sources, as well as the artist's own experience and imagination, interact and combine into thematically unified works. Selected for their color and texture, unconventional materials (animal hide, blankets, velvet, and tarpaulin) are used as grounds upon which Schnabel builds up wax, modeleing paste, and pigment, producing beatuifully worked, but agitated surfaces. found objects, particularly the broken ceramics that have been identified with Schnabel's work, are often employed as formal elements and create numerous interplays between the thick, three-dimensional surfaces and the orginal two-dimensionality of the grounds. Both his images and chosen media assume equal formal and emotive roles in Schabel's work.
The Acquisition
While Julian Schnabel is known best for paintings on crockery, since the mid-1980s Schnabel has also made many paintings on tarpaulins. The Wind is among the first of these tarpaulin paintings.