Jonathan Meese’s style of paint application is as forceful and savage as his media induced juju. In Requiemeese, his raw colours are squeezed straight from the tube and battered into resistant submission. Through this slack-handed process, Meese’s paint refutes illusion and retains its form as product, giving a pop and readymade edge to his brutal expressionism. In rendering a self-portrait as vampiric monster, Meese comically sucks the essence of painting dry: his impassioned gestures a by-product of play, the whimsical vice of a fictional artist/mad genius hell bent on cult status and world domination
In
Stanley Kubrick, Jonathan Meese paints his idol
as the monolithic ‘Lenin head’ of communist propaganda:
visionary and revered harbinger of the utopian prospect. Meese
renders his abstraction with a scatological out pouring of
bile-like sentiment: cavernous blacks and polluted white smears
engulf the canvas in a theatre of horror; putrid brown entrails
spill out in cheap thrill spectacle. Meese uses abjection
as an apocalyptic metaphor. Grotesque, sublime, and comically
dumb, his painting follows the formulaic principles of science
fiction film prophecy: envisioning the future as post-Armageddon
landscape, where primitivism is embraced as the rational and
finite social solution.
Jonathan Meese draws from German Expressionism, a movement dominated by the horrors of war and social discontent, especially in painting and film. It was strongly concerned with the unique vision of the artist: a conception of artist-as-diviner that Meese readily embraces. In
Catdim, Meese presents himself as an exotic oracle. His flat black mask sits with elegant form over his energetic gold colour-field, reminiscent of Emil Nolde’s Prophet. Meese infuses his images with immediacy and pathos, and his use of these values in a contemporary context lends authenticity to his B-movie alter-ego.
Jonathan Meese’s sculptures pose as relics of undead ritual. Cast in bronze, these gargoyles seem to invite rather than ward off evil. In this series titled Solder of Fortune, Meese creates an army of vengeful ‘gods for hire’. Combining the exotica of theurgist religions with the titilation of late night ghoul films, Meese’s Soldier of Fortune “Iwan†(baby) is horrific and kitsch, preying on the deepest fears of media-fuelled imagination.
Jonathan
Meese is a champion of the lost cause. His personal interests
reverberate throughout his paintings: comic books, horror
films, medieval crusades, and outsider art merge into a compendium
of morality and epic failure. In his paintings, clear-cut
roles of good vs. evil are confused, ironic propaganda is
served up with homebrew conviction, and malevolent knaves
become heroes of the disenfranchised. In Der Suppenpharao,
Meese invents a protagonist of questionable intent. Based
on Zardoz’s savage executioner, his masked gladiator-cum-superman
stars in a poster-like composition, brimming with promise
of pulp fiction drama. Meese incorporates himself into his
fantasy, as a tribe of snout-nosed nymphs approving the impending
carnage.
Jonathan Meese’s humorous titles and painted slogans
are written in an invented language, not dissimilar to Anthony
Burgess’s Nadsat. Parodying the authoritarian and convoluted
structure of German, Meese’s nonsensical compounds are
based in descriptive logic and onomatopoeia. Meese approaches
painting with a similar fluidity of expression. In
Quallenmeese
, his unpredictable gestures contain a savant sophistication
in their vulgar naiveté. A scrawled black mass is easily
read as self portrait, regressively primal and violent, with
a wilful propensity for being misunderstood.
Jonathan Meese’s self-portraits regurgitate the artist’s
own image through appropriated symbols of provocative cultural
significance. Designing himself as a quasi-messianic figure,
Meese resurrects all manner of anathema to develop his own
satirical theology: a kind of conscious cleansing through
a whole-hearted embracing of horror. Through his many reinventions,
Meese replicates the omni-potent barrage of celebrity image
manufacturing to style himself as a cult figure, both symptom
and cure of a corrupted belief system. In
Sankt Opiumeese,
Meese is both wangateur and satanic glam rocker: voodoo spin-doctored
as pop, demonology transferred from ancient lore to futuristic
trend.
The canvas entitled The Temptation Of The State Of The
Blessed Ones In "Archland" by Jonathan Meese is a large-scale
triptych showing a crucifixion in its centre. The subject
seems to be close to an apocalyptic scenario. Torn up and
skinned bodies, sucking, parasitical creatures, violence
and sexuality dominate the scene. This world is a slaughterhouse,
a place of horror, cruelty and power. Only the strongest
seem to survive in this
horror vacui of chaos and
although the rules are disgracefully destroyed there is
a well organized form in this labyrinth of fabulous creatures
and ghosts. They follow a certain kind of order, create
their own state with strictly divided functions.
Meese names the main creature which is nailed to the cross
as god of his own state. This creature, partly abstract
and partly carnal, is the energetic centre of the painting,
the nutrient of this state. All figures are related to this
centre, subtly involved with it, all is circling around
this wounded and continuously pulsating core of this apparatus,
the source of not only food for the mind.
The cross being the place of this creature grows out of
a trunk, a veined tree of life. The background shows a line
of pinnacles, the cross is put in a defended castle as the
centre of power. The power of this castle is protected by
different creatures, guards, knights, which power and strength
is fed by female sexuality. From this centre spreads out
a multiracial state of mystical creatures, bend together
by a spiritual order.
Often
compared to Jean Michel Basquiat, Jonathan Meese’s graffiti-like
paintings are infused with rebellious zeal. Overlapping with
reference to modernist primitivism, and shamelessly colluding
in their own image-hype, Meese’s self-portraits play with
the concept of artist as both revolutionary and contemporary
anti-hero. Arising from a faux-puerile sense of play, Meese’s
colours seem haphazardly applied, forms etched out with a
staged adolescent malice. Furnishing his work with an amateur
aesthetic – equivalent to drive-in movies, and dime-store
thrillers – his work embraces the values of individualism
and anarchy as a political force. In Leninja Warmonch, Meese’s
satirical horns and nose ring don’t deface the portrait, rather
the image is a disfigurement itself: an authoritarian icon
of derision, gaining its power from its own ugly ridiculousness.
In a collaborative process made simple, Oehlen provides the photographic material and both artists take turns painting around it. None of these works are immediately recognisable as Oehlen or Meese, and that's what makes them so good. Like a nuclear fusion, the two become one; an invincible super-artist refining the best qualities of both.
The Greeting is a ridiculous portrait of a lumpy gangly-armed housewife waving about a feather duster/penis, teetering on glamour model's legs. The render her almost obscenely repulsive, but the sexual delusion of the male gaze is inevitable: the artists' collage in a mirror to peek up her dress.
Describing their merger as a courtly affair of awkward politeness punctuated by artistic embarrassment, Albert
Oehlen & Jonathan Meese unite forces as a way to expand both practice and dialogue. Like a conceptual game of tennis, an artwork is begun, and then bantered back and forth until it gains a life of its own. For the artists, it's a way to accept loosing control over a work, explore the possibility of spontaneous action and reaction, and stamp out self-indulgent excess like a bad habit. The end results are both breathtaking and funny.
Storm cheekily sets computer-generated porn as the hot-bod for a wild-armed monstress: a goddess of violent temper and salvation.
Jonathan
Meese is a self-proclaimed cultural exorcist. In his performances,
sculptures, and paintings he adopts a shamanistic role, schizophrenically
channelling all manner of chaotic zeitgeist and psycho/media
debris. In his self-portraits, Meese exaggerates his real-life
‘wild-man’ features, his image continuously mutating through
a cast of characters – from demons to divas and superheroes
– to develop potential narratives exploring the nature of
power, corruption, and contemporary mythology. In Dr. Babysquawar
Meese’s form morphs into a raging animal. Less image than
projectile explosion of paint on canvas, Meese’s painting
contains an unrestrained energy and brutal power; the bright
colours and spastic rendering lend sarcasm to this false god.
Albert Oehlen and Jonathan Meese both make paintings about failure: of the function of art, politics, and ideological systems. Working collaboratively, they explore these terrains in a hard-hitting and overtly humorous way. Situation creates a highly sexed still-life: a mangled-faced female figure reduced to tits and a brain. Dealing with issues of visual ideals and sexual politics, their cyborg superwoman is less an archetype of perfection than the suggestive abstract sculptures on the plinth beside her.
Jonathan
Meese confesses: "My biggest goal is not only to direct in
Bayreuth but to make A Clockwork Orange II, Zardoz II, The
Damned II . . . ". The essence of theatricality is central
to Meese’s work. Deceptive in nature, it provides a simulated
realm of falsification and absurdity, where form and idea
become easily detached, and reassembled according to the artist’s
own logic. Meese’s grand claims become effigies, redundant
sequels to real historical epics. Drawing influence from Viennese
Actionism, Meese finds catharsis in replicating ritual, rendering
its powerful aura defunct in the process. In Lady Missmeesau,
he dreams of himself as a burly diva, the star of Bayreuth’s
famous Wagner festival.
Quote from: Loose Canon: Matt Saunders on Jonathan Meese’s
Mother Parsifal, posted on: www.artforum.com/inprint/id=8996
In
Sankt Ich III, Meese collages together photos
of himself in rockumentary-style layout: a devotional format
of celebrity-as-god. Churning elements of his private life
into readily identifiable stereotypes for public consumption,
Meese’s snapshots disclose both the man and the myth.
There’s Meese as smiling Jesus and evil-eyed Malcolm
McDowell, burnt out hippie and visionary youth, scraggly-haired
prophet and bare-chested sex symbol, master of darkness and
apron-stringed mamma’s boy (beloved Mrs. Meese holds
primary importance, top left!). Inter-spliced with graffiti
scrawl and provocative clippings from magazines, Meese frames
this pastiche with a formulaic sentimentality, mimicking the
ephemera of teenage keepsakes.
The Kampkopf Baby (Warmilk) is a massive mound of red flesh with shiny green eyes, and bite marks, a figure both animal and human. The title Kampkopf (Warhead) suggests a wounded and decapitated head of an evil beast. The artist’s base of makassa veneer presents the head as a valuable trophy.
Jonathan
Meese’s work exploits cultural taboo. Appropriating
historical and media references. Meese parodies his own symbolism.
His paintings reduce the perception evil to the level of operatic
theatre: simulated horror plays out in clichéd formulas,
resounding in contemporary consciousness as benign fable and
gripping spectacle. In
Dr. Phantomeese…, Meese
paints himself as a barbaric warlord, set against a blood
red ground emblazoned with iron crosses. Here, propaganda
associations are depleted to decorative motif; his character
is that of a villain in a fairytale, a slightly un-PC nemesis
of boys’ adventure.
Following the cliché legacy of the horror genre, Jonathan Meese moulds his false gods with a timeless ferocity, using bronze casting to attest to their plausible immortality. Soldier of Fortune “Humphrey†(day) conveys an animistic spiritualism: the hellish face appears as ingenerate within the raw molten material, suggesting a malevolent presence at the very origin of nature.