Glenn Brown British, b. 1966
This painting is based upon Jean-Honoré Fragonard's (1732-1806) work A Boy as Pierrot (1785), which features an angelic youth dressed in an 18th century clown costume too large for his slight frame. The original was painted a few short years before the bloody French Revolution (1789-1799), when many of Fragonard's most loyal patrons in the court of Louis XV were executed or exiled. The Pierrot costume was a parody of what many working class citizens considered a pompous, disconnected bourgeois and aristocratic elite whose hands are symbolically subdued by oversized sleeves. In Brown's rendition the mood of Fragonard's wide eyed cherub-esque subject goes from rosy-cheeked contentment to foreboding fright. Clad in what now resembles a decorative straitjacket, the boy is turned upside down in this 1995 composition – evoking the disorienting technique of German neo-expressionist Georg Baselitz (b.1938), who sought to shift the viewer's focus from traditional figuration to abstract formalism. The longing title of the work is drawn from the melancholic lyrics of British post-punk band Joy Division, who Brown draws upon to title a number of his paintings.
– Steven Matijcio, Curator, Contemporary Arts Center, Cincinnati, USA
Exhibitions
Brilliant! New At from London, Walker Arts Center, Minneapolis 1995
Houston, Contemporary Arts Museum, Brilliant! New Art from London, 1996
Queen's Hall Arts Centre, Hexham 1996
Tate Liverpool retrospective 2009
Fondacion Sandretto Re Rebaudengo 2009
Museum Ludwig, Budapest retrospective 2010
1000 Lives, curated by Massimiliano Gioni, Gwangju Biennale, Korea, 2010
"Glenn Brown at Upton" Upton House, Oxfordshire 2012
Post Pop, Saatchi Gallery, 2014