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Now Kitaj haunts his ‘killer critics’

June 20, 2008 13:03

By

Julia Weiner ,

Julia Weiner

2 min read

Eight months after he killed himself, R B Kitaj is the star of the Royal Academy’s Summer Exhibition

In 1994, the Tate Gallery in London mounted a major retrospective of the work of R B Kitaj. For the artist, life would never be the same again. Such was the savagery of the reviews that Kitaj blamed the critics for the death of his wife, Sandra Fisher, of a brain aneurysm shortly after the exhibition closed. In disgust he left Britain, his home for 30 years, and returned to his native United States, vowing that he would not set foot here ever again.

Fourteen years on, and his paintings are once more on show at a major London gallery, the Royal Academy, as an integral part of its Summer Exhibition. This time, the critics have been kinder.  Too late for Kitaj, perhaps — he died in October 2007, aged 74.

The RA show is a memorial and tribute to the artist, who was elected a Royal Academician in 1985, the first American since John Singer Sargent to receive this honour. Twenty-nine paintings and works on paper are on display, curated by art expert and author Marco Livingstone.

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