COPENHAGEN.- The National Gallery of Denmark (Statens Museum for Kunst) has just begun preparing for next autumnís major special exhibition by Bob Dylan.
The ARTKABINETT social network of fine art collectors has always enjoyed his music. Now we can appreciate his fine artwork.
The exhibition will feature a rich array of new works that have not been exhibited at any other venue.
It will also be the first major presentation to show Bob Dylanís most recent works: large-format acrylic paintings.
When Bob Dylan gave a rare performance of the song "When I Paint My Masterpiece" at a concert in Copenhagen earlier this year, it was a covert nod to the National Gallery of Denmark on account of the coming exhibition.
Probably very few people are aware that Bob Dylan has been an exceedingly productive visual artist since the 1960s. It has only been in the last couple of years that this multitalented artist has revealed this aspect of his prolific abilities and allowed a series of his works to be shown in public.
The critically acclaimed exhibition "Bob Dylan & The Drawn Blank Series" opened at the Kunstsammlungen Chemnitz in Germany in the autumn of 2007, and smaller selections of many of the watercolours displayed in that exhibition have subsequently been shown in galleries in Europe and the USA.
Bob Dylan has shape-shifted more times in his career than any other pop musician. His music has always reflected that need to seek out new forms of self-expression. What's less known is that his paintings function in the same way -- providing virtual chapter markings and sign posts in a lifetime filled with twists and turns.
In a museum show that's scheduled to open in Europe in 2010, Dylan will exhibit nearly 100 of his works, including the world premiere of 30 large-format paintings from the artist's upcoming "Brazil" series. The show will also feature original paintings from Dylan's "The Drawn Blank" series.
The exhibition is scheduled to open in the autumn of 2010 at the National Gallery of Denmark (Statens Museum for Kunst) in Copenhagen.
Publicists for the show were able to provide images of two works that will appear at the museum. Both images come from Dylan's "The Drawn Blank" series.
In the first image (above, left), titled "Train Tracks" (2009), Dylan revisits his obsession with railway tracks that he has depicted in numerous paintings in the past. This latest variation features a blood-red sky dominating an anonymous rural landscape. The earth seems to reflect the hues of the sky as the railway stretches into infinity.
In the second image , titled "Man on a Bridge" (2009, below left), Dylan once again depicts a favorite visual subject -- a man in a hat standing solitary in what appears to be a European city. The musician has created many variations on this striking composition.
In a statement, the museum's chief curator, Kasper Monrad, said that several of Dylan's images "reveal an affinity for some of the modernist masters, not least Henri Matisse's works from the 1920s."
Paintings and watercolours
The exhibition at the National Gallery of Denmark, which is planned to open in the autumn 2010, will feature nearly 100 works ñ many of which are reputed to be completely new paintings that Bob Dylan is currently working on, and which will thus be seen in public for the first time at the Copenhagen opening.
Since The Drawn Blank Series, Bob Dylan has feverishly devoted himself to acrylic painting, and the exhibition at the National Gallery of Denmark will be the first to document this new direction he has taken in his work and to display large-format paintings from the artistís forthcoming Brazil Series together with many of the original watercolours from the internationally acclaimed The Drawn Blank Series.
From the limelight to everyday life
Bob Dylan's works most commonly evolve during his extensive tours, and the motives are correspondingly informed by the milieus and people he comes across in his nomadic existence. Here we find silent, anonymous figures passing briefly through the artistís field of vision.
Landscapes, city scenes and the interiors of hotels, bars, restaurants accompany other familiar motifs. In this respect, Bob Dylan seems to effortlessly step out of the limelight, depicting the commonplace day-to-day life he meets along his way, both austerely and with a superb feeling for the obscure situations that a painting can convey. As a visual artist, Dylan turns out to be a phenomenal observer who from a distanced perspective depicts the banal and commonplace in life so that they appear fresh and novel to the viewer.
"Bob Dylan's artworks are informed by the same constant compulsion to renew that characterises his music. He doesnít seem satisfied with settling on one form of expression once he has perfected it, but is constantly experimenting and trying out new artistic techniques and styles," says Director of the National Gallery of Denmark, Karsten Ohrt.
From the art history perspective
Bob Dylan's visual artistic practice has only been discussed by art historians to a limited extent, so critical examination and interpretation are called for.
"Several of Dylan's images reveal an affinity for some of the modernist masters, not least Henri Matisseís works from the 1920s ñ a link that is particularly interesting, given the unique collection of Matisseís earlier works that belong to the National Gallery of Denmark.
The choice of motifs, the unusual expressivity and the existential tenor in Bob Dylanís works are testament to an imagery that is unmistakeably his own," says the Chief Curator at the National Gallery of Denmark, Kasper Monrad, who is organising the planned exhibition.



