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Creativity in motion: How painter Alex Katz partners with performers

American artist Alex Katz has headlined more than 250 solo shows during his almost eight decades as a painter. His depictions of family celebrations and social gatherings, often rendered in vivid colors and on a large scale, are now iconic. 

What has slipped under the radar is Mr. Katz’s close partnerships with performing artists, especially avant-garde theater ensembles, choreographers, and dancers. 

Why We Wrote This

Alex Katz sees the world through a lens of possibilities. An exhibit in Maine lifts the curtain on the famous artist’s designs for the performing arts.

But Colby College Museum of Art in Waterville, Maine, is changing that with an exhibition focused not only on his painting, but also on his inventiveness as a designer of stage sets and costumes. 

Mr. Katz doesn’t consider his stage designs a deviation. “Working on the theater and dance seemed very natural to me,” he comments in an email interview. “I didn’t think of it as much different from painting.” 

Museums have been slow to embrace these less-traditional art forms and even to highlight friendships between artists working in different mediums. 

“I can only surmise that this work has been considered tangential to Katz’s overall oeuvre and therefore of less interest and import,” says Maine art scholar Carl Little. But it’s more related than one might realize. “First and foremost,” he adds, “there’s the connection to his lifelong focus on the figure, which plays out with striking effect in many of his designs for dance and theater.”

Since first putting paintbrush to canvas almost eight decades ago, American artist Alex Katz has been featured in nearly 500 group exhibitions and headlined more than 250 solo shows around the world. His depictions of joyful family celebrations and pleasant social gatherings, often rendered in flat forms, vivid colors, and on a large scale, are now iconic. 

In fact, his portraits of people mixing and mingling are such trademarks that a current retrospective devoted to the still-prolific painter at New York’s Guggenheim Museum is aptly titled “Alex Katz: Gathering.”

Also widely shown and highly recognizable are his numerous paintings of Ada, his wife of 64 years, as well as his luminous plein-air landscapes, often inspired during summers in Maine. 

Why We Wrote This

Alex Katz sees the world through a lens of possibilities. An exhibit in Maine lifts the curtain on the famous artist’s designs for the performing arts.

What has somehow slipped under the radar about Mr. Katz is his close collaborations with performing artists, especially avant-garde theater ensembles, choreographers, and dancers, most notably the Paul Taylor Dance Company. 

But Colby College Museum of Art in Waterville, Maine, is changing that with an exhibition focused on this aspect of Katz’s illustrious career, celebrating not only his painting talent, but also his inventiveness as a designer of stage sets and costumes. 

Isaac Katz/Courtesy of Colby College

Alex Katz, who first started painting almost eight decades ago, relaxes in Maine in 2021.

“Alex Katz: Theater and Dance,” on display through Feb. 19, is the first comprehensive museum exhibition of his highly collaborative, exuberant, and playful work with performing artists. It features a mix of mediums and materials, showcasing his explorations of dance and choreography in paint, but also with some never-before-seen sketches, collages, photographs, film, and “cutouts” – two-dimensional sculptures that informed his stage sets. 

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