American artist Chuck Close, whose large-scale portraits immortalized friends, artists and some of pop culture's most recognizable faces, died Thursday aged 81.
His death, from congestive heart failure, followed complications from long-term illness according to Pace Gallery, which has represented his work since the 1970s.
Born in 1940 in Monroe, Washington, Close initially modeled his work on Abstract Expressionists like Jackson Pollock, whose paintings he had encountered as a teen in the 1950s. After studying at the University of Washington, Yale University and the Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna, Austria, he took up a post teaching painting at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, and soon developed his own signature style.
American artist Chuck Close works on his painting 'Cindy II,' a portrait of fellow artist Cindy Sherman, in 1988. Credit: Margaret Miller/Photo Researchers History/Getty Images
Despite early influences, Close rejected abstraction in favor of figuration. His first exhibition featured a series of black-and-white paintings based on photographic portraits, a practice that would come to define his later career.
Widening his palette to include color, Close typically created his larger-than-life paintings using photos he had taken himself. His technique centered on a grid system that saw him placing squares over photographs before proportionally replicating the contents of each onto much larger canvases.
The resulting artworks were often photo-realistic -- sometimes to the extent that the original images' imperfections were intentionally reflected in the portraits. But by painting colorful, geometric forms in each tiny "pixel," his creations frequently took on a distinctive, almost psychedelic form.
Close's life took a dramatic turn in 1988 when a spinal aneurysm left him almost completely paralyzed aged 48, though he regained enough movement to continue painting using a brush strapped to his wrist and forearm with a brace. His mastery of portraiture was all the more remarkable given his prosopagnosia -- or face blindness -- a condition that prevented him from recognizing or recalling people's faces.
Chuck Close using a hand brace to hold his paint brush in 1996, following his spinal aneurysm. Credit: Mark Lennihan/AP
Chuck Close pictured at the Strand Bookstore in New York City in 2014. Credit: Monica Schipper/Getty Images
The accusations led the National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC, to cancel a forthcoming exhibition of Close's work. Having been diagnosed with dementia in 2015, the painter went on to spend his remaining years largely out of the public eye.
"Chuck Close made a huge impression on me when I saw his painting of Philip Glass at the Whitney when our family visited NY in 1980," Fairey wrote. "I stood in front of that large painting completely mesmerized for what seemed like hours.
"I would take a look at some other paintings and then wander back over to the Chuck Close. I was 10 years old and that day marked a turning point."
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