Disaster as destiny.

PositionMUSEUMS TODAY - "Donald Sultan: The Disaster Paintings" exhibition

IN THE EARLY 1980s, painter, sculptor, and printmaker Donald Sultan began working on industrial landscapes and explored the subject for nearly a decade. "Donald Sultan: The Disaster Paintings" is the first exhibition to focus on the series, and it is the first time a significant number of these paintings are being exhibited together. The social and cultural anxieties about the fragility of systems and structures that Sultan's "Disaster Paintings" convey address issues that remain relevant, making this a timely moment to reexamine this body of work.

"The Smithsonian American Art Museum is pleased to present this important exhibition of paintings by Donald Sultan, an artist whose work both speaks to a particular moment in the history of American modernism and transcends the moment to confront issues that resonate with audiences today," says Stephanie Stebich, The Margaret and Terry Stent Director at the Smithsonian.

The series depicts imposing, man-made structures--such as industrial plants and train cars--as fragile constructs that can be undone by catastrophic events. Throughout his 40year career, Sultan has explored paradoxes in his work--between the abstract and the everyday, industrial subjects and the natural world. The "Disaster Paintings" present a merging of apparent opposites, bringing together the materials of Minimalism with representational painting, stylistically combining figuration and abstraction, and making references to high and low culture, ranging from images of actual events drawn from the daily newspaper to 19th-century art-historical iconography.

Sultan combines industrial subject matter with industrial materials, such as tar and Masonite tiles, to create large-scale works that have such a physical presence they can be considered as much relief sculptures as paintings. He was one of the first artists of his generation to employ a wide range of industrial tools and materials in lieu of traditional brushes and paints. Sultan's choice of materials serves as a visual metaphor for the subject matter of the "Disaster Paintings."

"These paintings have a physicality that can only be experienced in person. Their power comes from Sultan's deft layering of...

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