Took a quick trip to Bushwick, last day to see Deborah Brown and Richmond Burton at Art 3, a gallery that features a library as well as its exhibitions. Gallery Link Here, detail of Brown's Yellow Gloves in her exhibition, Parlor Games. |
Construction and release is the true parlor game, which the subjects reference, both obviously and subtly. |
In the front room, Richmond Burton also develops compositions with marks. Gallery Link |
Nubby canvas, scraped paint, penciled notations and finally marks, in bronze and silver, dancing over the surface. |
Detail |
There is something almost slapdash about how these paintings are made. |
But then I wonder how on earth he arrived in such a teeming landscape. |
Jessica Weiss at Outlet. Her wallpaper paintings are of special interest and are a theme she's been mining for years. The way she makes them is physical, somatic--like how some experience life through their bodies. Weiss works that way, alike a construction worker scaffolding material fearlessly, even recklessly. Gallery Link |
Jessica Weiss, detail, Pin the Tail on the Tiger - cardboard...on printed canvas...on a heavy burlap...with pushpins.... |
The physicality of these paintings is sumptuous |
thumbtack - and why not?! |
I did back up! Here is the whole painting~ |
More details - Dressed to Kill, 2016 |
This pleated, silkscreened canvas tacked to the painting surface just kills me |
Doubled marks: painting as screen print |
The full painting. Love her research, humor, process. |
2 comments:
Love the Deborah Brown! And your photos! Thank you.
Ann Knickerbocker, Peter Malone of Hyperallergic wrote a wonderful summary of these works. The link is:
http://hyperallergic.com/294027/paintings-playfully-distilled-from-18th-century-european-portraiture/
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