Saturday, January 17, 2009

This Land Was Made for You and Me



Someone mentioned the other night that a pour was never an accident. No. But it is a mystery and that is the allure.

Saturday, December 27, 2008

Brooklyn Rooftops and Barkley Hendricks


It's time to pack the paintings and head to a warmer clime and palette. Already feeling nostalgic. Packing up is hard to do. This rooftop image reminds me of the Barkley Hendricks show at the Studio Museum. The blanket of snow (now gone) and the sharp contrasts conjure the structural and delightful white paintings, which knocked me out. Hendricks' is one of the best shows I have ever seen. Link to Google Image search is above, and look for Hendricks' WHAT'S GOING ON? I would have liked to post it here to see with the photo, but copyright issues were unclear.

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Transition


Figuring out how New York enters into it. More narrative than I've gone in the past. Have to think about this. Find the language for the grids, the overpasses, the tunnels, the structures around me.

Wednesday, December 03, 2008

ShapeShifter Filmed on Vernissage TV

Click link above to see Vernissage TV film of Dorsch's ShapeShifter opening...

Sunday, November 30, 2008

Shapeshifter



This image from Shapeshifter (linked above) was taken yesterday by Tyler Emerson-Dorsch, curator. The two paintings in the image are my most recent, incorporating my interest in moving from one area of a painting to another with combined applications: transparent pours, Chinese idioms and textures or gestures impacted by New York, where these were made.

Because I would miss the opening I consoled myself with a visit to Chelsea, where I saw fabulous painting and excellent photography:

Al Held at Kasmin, spatial swoops and geometric density
Trenton Doyle Hancock at Cohan, simplified and elegant religious icons
Small Abstractions at Robert Miller, history in the making
Petah Coyne at Lelong, dissolute fantasies to swoon in
Haeri Joo at Erben, young, combination of Shutz and Cecily Brown
Cora Cohen at Steinberg, elegant surfaces and beautiful edits
Jason Karalek at Audiello, splashy buoyant abstraction
Andrew Guenther at Freight & Volume, idiosyncratic reliquaries
Jessica Rohrer at PPOW, geometry in depth with quotidian features
Vincent Desiderio at Marlborough, traditional single figures most compelling
Fang Lijun at Arario, small shelf sculptures work as image and abstraction
Meredith Allen at Thorpe, sumptuous photographs of plastic, funereal and optimistic
Cindy Sherman at Metro Pictures, over the top outtakes on aging and power
Lisa Sanditz at CRG, landscapes of gesture inspired by China
Stephen Westfall at Lennon, Weinberg, new works inspired by airmail envelopes etc.
Tomma Abst at Zwirner, elegant, color saturated abstractions that play with depth
Jonas Wood at Anton Kern, collage aesthetic painting inspired by Brian Calvin
Terry Winters at Matthew Marks, mushy delicious paint atop grid structures
Joan Mitchell Sunflowers at Cheim and Reid, breathtaking fields of Monet-like strokes and dazzling color combinations
Through window (gallery closed): Karen Heagle at I-20, what looked like in the gloaming, delicious big bird forms and splashy paint

On other days but also great:
Alfred York at Spengemann, bucolic, quiet pleasures
Katia Santibanez at Danese, fierce meditations on nature that become pattern, almost white noise that in the drawings, flicker on and off

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Returning from Madrid to find the leaves have fallen




The two bottom photos were taken the day I left for Madrid, 11/05/08, a most wonderful day in the United States. The top photo was taken this morning, one week later, the early hour a result of jet lag.

Friday, October 24, 2008

Under the Influence






Under the Influence


Lenore Gray Review: Uncommon Ground



Almost by definition, artists are people with a knack for keeping in touch with their inner child. But some artists do it better — or at least more diligently — than others.

A case in point is Elizabeth Condon, a Brooklyn-based artist whose dreamy, semi-abstract paintings are currently on display at the Lenore Gray Gallery. In her artist’s statement, Condon cites both Doctor Seuss and Chinese scroll-paintings as artistic inspirations. In lesser hands, that might be a recipe for disaster. But Condon makes it work, deftly fusing the free-flowing, nonlinear perspective of Chinese painting with the free-flowing, nonlinear logic of the Seuss books.

In Two Places, for example, a series of recognizable images — a house, a tree, a river — float in a sea of softly pulsing colors. The result feels like a dream or memory suddenly, if fleetingly made visible. Other works evoke fantastic landscapes, whether it’s a night sky filled with glowing stars and planets (Dispersion) a fairy-tale forest filled with wisps of sea-green fog (The Woods) or a swirling garden scene (Night Flowers) worthy of another age-defying artist: Paul Klee.

The show’s other contributor, Jerry Mischak, also has a Seussian streak. Indeed, Mischak, who teaches sculpture at the University of Rhode Island, is best known for using duct tape, a material that he can coax into almost any shape from sleekly geometric to sensuously organic.

It’s a talent that is on full display in City in Balance (Let’s Share a Place), a large duct-tape sculpture in which a miniature city seems to sprout from the limbs of a gnarled tree. Though the message — something along the lines of “Wouldn’t it be nice if we could all live in harmony with each other and with nature” — is serious, Mischak’s approach is more playful than political.

Through Nov. 6 at the Lenore Gray Gallery, 15 Meeting St., Providence. Hours: Mon.-Fri. 10-4:30, or by appt. Contact: (401) 274-3900.
Bill Van Siclen

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Wanting to see these paintings together...



Kingdom, 2008, acrylic and oil on linen, 24 x 39 inches; Bubble's Perch, 1998, oil on linen, 48 inches diameter.

Monday, October 20, 2008

Construction City



My neighborhood is a construction site...I am thrilled by the machinery, the construction sheds, the orange and white striped logs...and the way orange netting, men and machinery alter the flow of traffic, with simple barriers and interventions. It's dense and annoying, but also thrilling--a narrative without distinct plot or predictable outcome.

Sunday, October 12, 2008

Beautiful October Weekend


Friday, caught the Acela express to Providence for my and Jerry Mischak's opening at Lenore Gray Gallery.

Saturday, saw shows in Chelsea, among them these favorites:

Judy Glantzman - Betty Cunningham Gallery
Joanna Pousette-Dart - Moti Hasson
Sue Williams - Zwirner
Robert Bardo - Alexander and Bonin
Beatriz Milhazes - James Cohan
Morandi - Luc Schoormans Gallery, Metropolitan Museum of Art