Arts

Step Into Beguiling Bygone Eras in Jeff Bartels’s ‘Urban Glitch’ Series


a square-format painting of a very detailed imaginary city scene with stacks of buildings, staircases, sidewalks, and platforms filled with people, cars, and advertising
“Urban Glitch 1983,” oil on linen. All images courtesy of the artist, shared with permission

Step Into Beguiling Bygone Eras in Jeff Bartels’s ‘Urban Glitch’ Series

Around the time he turned 50, Jeff Bartels (previously) found himself thinking more and more about memory and nostalgia. “It occurred to me that I could remember certain things from my past exactly, while other memories were mixed up or even wrong,” he tells Colossal. “So I decided to explore that confusion.”

Bartels’s ongoing series Urban Glitch consists of five paintings so far, each focusing on different years from the recent past, ranging from 1979 to 2001. Each painstakingly detailed composition highlights pop culture of the era, from the latest cars and products to pastimes, music, and fashion.

Detail of “Urban Glitch 1983”

The imaginary buildings stack on top of one another and connect via bridges, platforms, and staircases reminiscent of M.C. Escher’s mathematically puzzling architecture.

Locked in time and space, as if the scenes are “glitching,” Bartels’s thriving urban hubs invoke the sights and sounds of bygone eras. People peer into their fridges, walk their dogs, play games at the arcade, and view paintings by Jean-Michel Basquiat or Damien Hirst’s seminal 1991 work of a tiger shark preserved in a tank.

The artist employs 3D modeling software to create references for each painting rather than photographic sources, so “there is a lot of work done on my computer before I even pick up a brush and being the painting,” he says. “This way, I can create realistic-looking scenes that could not exist in the real world.”

Each piece takes hundreds of hours to complete due to the meticulous process of defining each building, figure, and tiny, stage-like scene. The artist estimates “1983” took about 850 hours altogether, and while the time commitment alone makes it “easy to burn out on them…” he says, “I do plan on continuing the series with at least a few more.”

Find more on Bartels’s website and Instagram.

“Urban Glitch 1985,” oil on linen, 30 x 30 inches
Detail of “Urban Glitch 1985”
“Urban Glitch 1979,” oil on linen, 30 x 30 inches
Detail of “Urban Glitch 1979”
Detail of “Urban Glitch 1979”
“Urban Glitch 1991,” oil on linen, 30 x 30 inches
Detail of “Urban Glitch 1983”
“Urban Glitch 2001,” oil on linen, 30 x 30 inches
Detail of “Urban Glitch 2001”

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