The exhibition room at start of ramp, showing a series of lightly painted works with various configurations of stripes. |
Hard to see here, but the variations suggested film loops or alterations within an ongoing field or screen. |
The stripes were created seemingly from graphite - lightly and perfectly applied. |
Early work. The early paintings are disconcertingly horizontal, with a few extra beats of space than expected. |
Another. Soft touch and paint full of breath. |
The screening room, where we observe Martin turn a painting on its side and pull paint down like watercolor. |
Detail of soft colors and touch |
Grid drawing on a rough surface: the structure beneath Martin's compositions. |
Practice: tethering line from one end to the other, meticulously with focus |
Detail |
Pleasurable, meditative methodologies: measure, then draw / augment |
Natural linen, graphite, white - with enough air for breathing |
In some ways not unlike Robert Ryman's White Paintings - but in the spirit of ink painting, despite emphasis on geometry |
Imperfections beneath the linework appear on many of Martin's paintings - surprising and not unwelcome |
This means a lot to me and expresses my feeling about painting as well. Imagery complicates the matter, but that in part is a question of one's moment. |
Moving to paintings, softly and lightly kissed by the brush. |
There is a faded quality to these that feels generous, insouciant even. |
The dripped watercolor technique shown here. Transparency allows light to shine through. Graphite provides opacity as does grid. A beautiful balance of elements. |
Not every idea is amazing. She tried and sometimes failed. |
The simplicity, her ability to allow it, was the great gift. |
An avid fan of her writing and thinking, I wanted to see this work without so much backstory; to see how it held up visually. |
It did. |
More successful in her vellum or tracing paper drawings was the restraint of pale red line bounded by graphite. |
Another beauty. |
Subtle, pulsing light |
The bands like a rolling credit on a screen... |
The blue painting on right, a knockout - color, proportion, touch just perfect. |
Toward the end of her life she returns to earlier motifs, which I did not include here but are in the show. |
Her last painting: one might argue incomplete. Still good to see. By this time, she's moving scale down from 6 to 5 feet widths. |