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Alexander Van Armstrong (artist)
Alexander Van Armstrong is a British expressionist painter best known for his giant portrait heads of tragic heroic 20th century icons.
Early Life and Education
Van Armstrong was born in London and attended Victoria College, Jersey, Channel Islands, and Maidstone Art College, England. He married a Swiss heiress in 1996. The artist lives in the South of France.
Career
After early success in London during the late 1990s, Van Armstrong moved to New York in 2002. A year later film director Spike Lee commissioned a giant portrait head of Joe Louis for the movie SHE HATE ME, marking the beginning of an ongoing collaboration.
Lee currently owns 30 paintings. One of these, a giant portrait head of Joe Louis, was singled out by The Guardian Newspaper as one of the highlights of The Brooklyn Museum’s recent well received exhibition of Lee’s art collection.
This same painting, Joe Louis 2, is set to feature in Spike Lee’s new movie, starring Denzel Washington, coming out early 2025.
Aesthetics and Subject Matter
Van Armstrong's work on the human body builds on the influence of Francis Bacon and Old Masters like Masaccio, exploring tragic heroic themes to do with human predicament. Choice of subject matter reflects his study of History, Mythology and Romantic literature, particularly Shelley’s Prometheus.
His giant portrait heads of Joe Louis and Sonny Liston are characterized by powerful paint handling, tempered by sophisticated use of painterly refinements like sfumato and chiaroscuro. Despite the unnerving scale and intensity of these paintings, his treatment of subject matter is poignant, never brutal.
The immanent sense of aliveness of this painter’s work owes, in part, to his exploration of Muybridge’s pioneering photographs of animal and human locomotion.
Recent Exhibitions
Two of Van Armstrong’s portraits of African American icons were recently on show at The Brooklyn Museum. Joe Louis 2 was the exhibition’s biggest painting. Malcolm X was the smallest.
Notable Works
Recently completed, NEMESIS, is an installation of 15 huge paintings, each 8 feet tall and up to 16 feet wide, referencing a historic Muhammad Ali fight. The artist’s exploration of The Fight of the Century builds on Francis Bacon’s experiments with boxing imagery from the 1960s.
THE KING OF PAIN triptych, 24 feet wide and 8 feet tall, takes on the challenge of tackling non literal portraiture on a scale 100 times life size. Sonny Liston is treated sympathetically as a tragic figure engaged in a Promethean struggle for redemption that ends badly.
Other works include small portraits of composers and painters. See https://vanarmstrong.com
Film
JOE LOUIS 2 was featured in Spike Lee’s movie, SHE HATE ME in 2004, together with a small triptych of Joe Louis, and a portrait of John Henry.
Twenty years later, JOE LOUIS 2 is set to feature in Lee’s new movie, an adaptation of Akira Kurosawa’s 1960s crime drama masterpiece, HIGH AND LOW.
Collections
Van Armstrong’s work is held in private collections as far afield as Oslo, Zurich, Paris, London, Edinburgh and New York.
Lucy Holt owns the artist’s first giant portrait head of Muhammad Ali, in addition to a number of smaller pieces. These are held at her 3000 acre estate in the Scottish Highlands.
Mindy Grossman, former CEO of Weight Watchers International, owns JOE LOUIS 1, as featured in Oprah Magazine, July, 2008, and a number of female nudes and small portraits.
Philanthropist Reggie Van Lee owns two portraits of President Obama and a study of the Male Back.
The bulk of the 30 pieces owned by Spike Lee are held at the director’s 40 Acres and a Mule Film Works in Fort Greene, Brooklyn.