Details
Description
Addict
Serge Hollerbach, c. 1973
Serge Hollerbach’s Addict is a stark psychological and social study in which the human figure …
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Addict
Serge Hollerbach, c. 1973
Serge Hollerbach’s Addict is a stark psychological and social study in which the human figure becomes both presence and void, caught within an urban environment that feels simultaneously immediate and alienating. The composition is dominated by a monumental, bent figure whose torso curves forward in a posture of physical and emotional collapse. This bowed arc creates the central structural line of the painting, pulling the viewer’s eye downward and inward. The figure’s mass is rendered in deep blacks and dark greens, absorbing light rather than reflecting it, so that the body reads less as solid anatomy than as a dense emotional weight within the scene.
The surrounding environment amplifies this sense of isolation. Hollerbach constructs a compressed cityscape of brick-red buildings, graffiti-marked walls, and slanted architectural planes that feel unstable rather than grounded. The perspective is deliberately skewed; surfaces tilt and overlap in ways that deny spatial comfort. This destabilization mirrors the internal condition implied by the title. The urban setting does not offer context or narrative resolution, it functions instead as psychological terrain, a landscape of fragmentation and neglect. The graffiti on the left wall introduces the visual language of contemporary street life, marking the environment as lived-in yet socially worn, a place where voices accumulate but individual identity erodes, which ironically Hollerbach signs his name.
Color operates symbolically as much as structurally. The red field near the top of the central form glows against cooler blues and grays, suggesting inner turbulence beneath the dark exterior. Small strokes of red punctuate the figure’s body like signals or wounds, drawing attention to areas of stress without literal depiction. The limited palette—black, red, muted green, and gray-blue—creates a somber tonal harmony that reinforces the work’s emotional gravity. White passages, particularly in the angular shapes at the lower edge, introduce sharp contrast but do not provide relief; instead, they fragment the composition further, contributing to a sense of dislocation.
Hollerbach’s brushwork is expressive yet controlled. Broad, velvety areas of pigment coexist with raw, scumbled textures, especially in the darker masses. Edges dissolve into surrounding color, preventing clear separation between figure and ground. This merging suggests a loss of boundaries, as though the individual is being absorbed by the environment. The absence of facial detail intensifies this effect: the subject is not portrayed as a portrait but as a condition, an embodiment of dependency, fatigue, and psychic withdrawal.
Despite its starkness, Addict is not sensationalized. Hollerbach minimizes graphic literalism through the single bottle of dropped pills. He focuses on evoking the internal landscape of addiction. The collapse, enclosure, and the narrowing of one’s world. The small dog in the mid-ground and the suggestion of everyday urban elements introduce faint traces of ordinary life continuing at the periphery, underscoring the figure’s disconnection rather than offering sentimentality. This tension between human presence and social invisibility aligns with Hollerbach’s broader humanist perspective, shaped by displacement and an enduring attention to those at the margins of stability.
-Jonathan Flike
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- Dimensions
- 26.5ʺW × 0.1ʺD × 36ʺH
- Frame Type
- Unframed
- Period
- 1970s
- Country of Origin
- United States
- Item Type
- Vintage, Antique or Pre-owned
- Materials
- Paper
- Condition
- Good Condition, Original Condition Unaltered, Some Imperfections
- Color
- Brick Red
- Condition Notes
- Please note that this item is vintage and shows wear consistent with age, use, and history. Signs of wear may … morePlease note that this item is vintage and shows wear consistent with age, use, and history. Signs of wear may include, but are not limited to, minor surface marks, patina, fading, or imperfections typical of older items. All items are sold as-is, which is standard with vintage and pre-owned goods and cannot be returned on the basis of condition. Measurements are approximate. We do our best to describe items accurately; however, condition assessments are subjective. If you would like additional details, images, or clarification before purchasing, please contact us. less
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