Artist Bio:
A native of Chicago, Jeff Zimmermann has achieved national and international recognition for his large scale murals featuring painted images of contemporary pop culture and sensitively rendered portraits. Zimmermann’s pop-culture references range from innocuous consumer products such as beer cans, hard candy rings, and high healed shoes, to more symbolically charged images like pistols and portraits of political figures. The images are discrete and floating, knitted together by geometric areas of flat color. The overall aesthetic is smooth and sensual: shiny metal and glossy surfaces, rendered in saturated colors. Zimmermann’s paintings have the sex appeal of commercial art, and any irony surrounding that connection is light and playful. The artist’s background as a graphic designer explains his shrewd use of flashy and graphic forms which also permeate the mass media (Zimmermann’s self-proclaimed competition), operating on the theory that we all deeply love flashy stuff.
While
rooted in contemporary life and consumer culture, Zimmermann’s work
also reveals a sympathetic affinity for everyday people. And though
he carefully avoids didacticism, instead playing the role of
objective visual journalist, viewers may get the sense that he has
reached his own conclusions. The portraits Zimmermann renders on such
enormous scale enact a specific agenda in his work. In an effort to
subvert the notion of what corporate and entertainment culture
considers newsworthy, Zimmermann incorporates into his murals a
diversity of people who live and work in the communities he
visits—these are not the faces we know from the news, magazines,
and television, or those whose historical or political status already
qualifies them as subjects for public art. Incorporating into his
works people excluded from the aforementioned categories—what he
calls real people—Zimmermann familiarizes himself with a community
while allowing its members to breathe authenticity and life into his
paintings. The portraits in Zimmermann’s artwork are dignified and
attractive, directing the viewer conversation toward a democratic
humanitarian dialog, while giving the work an emotional depth that
complements the polished context of his product-based world.
2009 Karen Ann Myers, Executive Director - Redux Contemporary
