David Klamen
David Klamen (born 1961) is an American artist and academic. He is known for visually diverse paintings that meld technical mastery with postmodern explorations of the processes by which humans understand and interpret experience. Klamen has exhibited across the United States, Europe and Asia, including individual shows at the
Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago (MCA), the
Chazen Museum of Art and the
Cedar Rapids Museum of Art, and major group exhibitions at the
Metropolitan Museum of Art, the
Art Institute of Chicago, the
Museum of Contemporary Art, San Diego, the
Indianapolis Museum of Art, and the
Crocker Art Museum. His work sits in the permanent collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the
Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art and the
Whitney Museum of American Art, among others. Klamen has been based in Chicago for most of his career, which includes being an educator for over thirty years, primarily at
Indiana University Northwest, where he was appointed Founding Dean, School of the Arts in 2018.
Klamen has produced multiple distinct, ongoing bodies of work—often shown in tandem—that range from
academic realist-like representation to
Op Art-like abstraction to warped re-paintings of art historical masterworks. ''Los Angeles Times'' critic
David Pagel wrote that a Klamen exhibition could appear to be the work of as many as six distinct artists, yet display sharp focus and virtuoso painting across a constellation of styles, subjects and strategies. He called Klamen "a master of the double take," using ambiguity to create
epistemological doubt and curiosity in viewers. Critics and curators, such as
Kathryn Hixson, have noted in his work an "oscillating relationship" between romantic and logical, subjective and objective; as a result they have often described it as sensuous, nostalgic and wistful, or meditative, mystical and eerily calm, but also enigmatic and brooding, and uncanny and complex.
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