1970-
Damian Loeb (born 1970) is a self-taught American painter. Growing up in Connecticut, he moved to New York City in 1989.
Loeb had his first solo show in 1999 at the Mary Boone Gallery. He is now represented by Acquavella Galleries in New York and has had international solo and group shows at galleries and museums, including White Cube in London, Jablonka Galerie in Cologne, the Kunsthalle in Hamburg, and a 2006 retrospective at the Aldrich Museum of Contemporary Art in Connecticut.
His work has consistently explored the dialogue of narrative tropes in an image soaked contemporary environment. Early works used found imagery collaged to create new contexts from photojournalism and advertising. Successive shows moved on to use and explore cinematic stills as the source of a visual collective consciousness.
Having taught himself photography in recent years, his latest body of work takes the dialogue to the next step by incorporating the vocabulary of cinematography and the expediency of his original photographs as inspiration for the new paintings.
According to the artist:
Our memories are convenient lies we create, cribbing images from others' experiences, subconsciously culled from the ever abundant and exponentially growing library of both digital and analogue film and print media -- always just a click away. We discard the personal specifics which don't conform to the ideal conventional beauty created by art directors and cinematographers. Art becomes about history and aesthetics or it is purely an esoteric intellectual pursuit if it doesn't address this new way of seeing. The advent of the digital age and the immediacy and convenience of digital video and photography allows people to become an integral part of the feedback loop which actively shapes the content we are fed. The images for the new show are a reflection of an idealized world filtered through the demands of eyes expecting momentous personal experiences to be composed like a Hollywood blockbuster -- romance to look like a French film from the 60's and fearto look like John Carpenter's Halloween. To quote Johnny Rotten,"This is what you want; this is what you get."
In creating the images I used as the basis for this collection, I shot all the time; constantly looking through the camera instead of over it, searching for what has now become universally familiar, the eye of the director. Focusing on both the narrative and scene setting, but careful to never interfere through instruction or forced lighting, I eventually managed to find ways to compose and capture these very specific "personal film stills". These images are solidified and codified through the act of painting them on canvas where they can be viewed as a new chapter in a conversation exemplified by artists as diverse as Vermeer, Balthus, Millais, and Eric Fischl, as well as the theatrical visions of the Lumiere brothers and the language created by master directors like Hitchcock, Kubrick, and Spielberg.