Katherine Bernhardt

Katherine Bernhardt’s loose, bold paintings revel in the visceral potential of putting paint to canvas. Her early portraits of fashion models pulled from magazines are frightening renditions of stylized perfection—melting smiles, sunken eyes, and puke-green hair illustrate individuals that seem at once savage and emaciated. Bernhardt’s depiction of everyday items are drawn from memory, created using acrylic and spray paint such objects include Doritos, socks, watermelon, and basketballs, among others. These images are economical and pragmatic—the same shape may represent two different objects, only transformed by their color. Her use of wet paint creates internal depth in these flat objects, with prominent outlines and deliberate, wide brushstrokes providing a sense of volume. Regardless of the subject, Bernhardt’s gestural style creates portraits of the world around her with all it’s deception, imperfection, and fluidity.


Bernhardt has exhibited at Portland Institute for Contemporary Arts, Oregon, Ulrich Museum of Art, Wichita, Kansas, Ukranian Institute of Modern Art, Chicago, Aldrich Museum of Contemporary Art, Ridgefield, Connecticut, Future Museum of Contemporary Art, Rome, and the Baltimore Contemporary Museum, Maryland, among many other international galleries. 


Read Katherine Bernhardt's interview with Artspace here

SHOWS

Articles

Katherine Bernhardt on her work in our new Greenpeace edition set
Katherine Bernhardt on her work in our new Greenpeace edition set
What to Say About Your Katherine Bernhardt Print
What to Say About Your Katherine Bernhardt Print
The Detroit Art Collector Developing Downtown Detroit
The Detroit Art Collector Developing Downtown Detroit
Color by Decade: 10 Works to Give Your Home a Blast from the Past
Color by Decade: 10 Works to Give Your Home a Blast from the Past
The Hort's Picks from Miami Art Week 2016
The Hort's Picks from Miami Art Week 2016