Philip Koch exhibition at Burchfield Penny Art Center

The work Burchfield Penney  Artist In Residence Philip Koch created over the past 2.5 years will be the subject of an exhibition on view from April 13 – July 29, 2018.

The exhibition, Time Travel in the Burchfield Archives: Philip Koch, will feature over 30 oil paintings and works on paper started in the areas where Charles Burchfield loved to work—West Seneca, East Aurora, Chestnut Ridge Park, downtown Buffalo, and Salem, OH. Selections of drawings from the Burchfield Archives that influenced Koch as he worked will also be in the installation.

Koch spent many hours in the Burchfield Penney Art Center archive poring through thousands of Burchfield drawings. “My researched revealed just how seriously he took his own talent. Burchfield built up his world step by step with preparatory studies he organized and documented which made a big impression on me,” said Koch. “It inspired me to think about recording my work in a meaningful, systematic way.”

Burchfield in his maturity came to reevaluate and re-value the work he had done in his early years and incorporated it into later paintings which inspired Koch to reassess the work he did as a young artist. “I saw more excitement, it was better than I remembered and encouraged me want to go back to borrow some of things I used to do in my 20s and 30s,” said Koch. “His openness to changing his mind about his early work encouraged me to reconsider my own methods. As a result, I began painting in oil outdoors again for the first time in 20 years. It has felt like a warm breeze renewing my excitement with the natural world.”

The residency provided Koch, who was born in Rochester, NY, his first opportunity to make art near where he grew up, as he didn’t study art until he went to college at Oberlin, OH. “I was struck by how profoundly an artist is influenced by where they experience their childhood, in both my case and Burchfield’s. You can see his childhood influencing the way he thought and felt all throughout the rest of his life and over and over you see imagery that comes right out of where he grew up,” said Koch. “Creating art work living in Buffalo he recycled the excitement he felt as a kid in Salem, Ohio. Painting in the environs where Burchfield worked reminded me of where I grew up and so much of what I do as a painter has to do with childhood memories. Burchfield found magic in the ordinary.”

Koch added that while he and Burchfield paint the landscape in distinct, different styles, they have an affinity of spirit for the natural world. “The Residency reinforced that conviction,” said Koch. “From his drawings I learned about his persistence and patience which is very instructive, artists by nature tend to be impatient and one of the keys to success is to negotiate with yourself to slow down and savor things. Burchfield drew beautifully, I ran across everything from wildly gestural studies to elegant, delicate ones of seed life or buds on a branch. He rendered an amazing range of feelings and approaches in the work. I came out respecting him as a draftsman.”

“When visitors see the exhibition, I want them to realize that the tradition of landscape painting is just as vital and contemporary a branch of contemporary art as any other. It’s a wild, risk taking, dangerous and mysterious undertaking.”

Click here to view available paintings by Philip Koch