Photograph of the artist: Courtesy of Galerie Gugging
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All works: Untitled. Graphite and colored pencils on newsprint cut and mounted on paper.
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Strobl's process is a seamless, multilayered appropriation and alteration of a photographic base. It starts with combing through the local newspapers for evocative images that will lend themselves to the transformation that is to come. He then scissors these images out of their original context and backs them with clean drawing paper. We know the steps that follow and the simple materials utilized (graphite and colored pencils), but not in what order, or if there is one—as the artist doesn't speak of it or allow onlookers when he is working.
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Strobl's compositions are generally encased in a drawn internal frame that is either very subtle (delicately enclosing each scene with rounded corners) or partially amorphous, covering large areas like a spill or a flood. Depending on the disposition of the underlying clip, he traces over certain outlines—topographic features, horizon lines, architectural details, winding perspectival lines--and if there are figurative elements that don't fit into the artist's vision, he encloses them in graphite, like an insect spinning a cocoon, or a minimalist reducing a representational image into a basic shape.
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What might have been a person about to mount a horse, a family canoeing down a stream, superheroes running beneath an underpass, a polar bear about to walk across a large expanse, a rhino grazing a pasture, three bears emerging from a river, a stork guarding her nest, boats floating in the ocean, or a spread-winged eagle in mid-flight, all become petrified, ghostly presences in Strobl's realm. This is, however, more a process of incorporation than it is one of elimination: the shapes remain heavy with the figures they have covered, with the motion they have frozen, and the "noise" they have silenced, but they become a conduit that merges any trace of human narrative into the landscape that it once sustained. A "classic" Strobl work, elegant in both execution and subject, will often feature shrouded human figures literally transformed into a graphite topography; lone peaks or sinuous curves against luminous green-blue skies. The artist is a perceptive colorist and imbues his world with shades green, grey, yellow, blue, and ivory white—blending and layering pigment onto large areas with an eye toward the existing texture and light in the underlying photograph—so that ultimately, we don't know where the artist's touch ends and the found image begins.
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INSTALLATION