Saturday, September 15, 2012

White Painting by Jane Fine

http://janefine.net/a/painting

Jane Fine, white painting
A white painting by Jane Fine as seen in an informal and private viewing at Pierogi. This is from her recent show (Formulas for Now, spring 2012), where it functioned as a culmination point for richer, darker works exhibited with it. The painting stays with me for the optical effects of white veils over light, buoyant color.
Look at these beauties--Poussin's battle scenes duke it out with Philip Guston and Robert Colescott
Overexposed iPhone image of harbor and flags: look at how color originates in orange notes that burst into flame and are then cooled by the incursion of earth, or flesh and water opposites.
Another painting: ultramarine blue extends optical intensity, slowed by earth mixtures
A closer view of the battle scene (reminds me of Guston's hairy hands holding trash-can-lid shields in the Met)


Guston, Street, 1977, 69 x 110 (approx.), Metropolitan Museum of Art
And it all comes tumbling down...look at the color: such muted primaries, variations!

A detail of Fine's drawing: marking systems at play

Fine spent a year working on drawings only and it shows in this Breughel-like mountain formation.

Detail upper right

Another drawing, created on dark paper as many of her drawings are.

Recently I've been hankering for constructed compositions, to look at as well as to make. Fine's work is so rewarding for this as well as for chroma and mark. There is nothing more fulfilling than witnessing a body of work grow over time and get better and better. It's what artists live to see as well as to do.








Tuesday, August 28, 2012

On View at the Kunstmuseum Bonn: David Reed, Heart of Glass

"I'm an artist who tries to put it all together."
Quotes from Kunstmuseum Interview (linked below images)




"The light is internal" (but also artificial, like a television monitor)

"How do we stay human within this kind of media light?"

Reed embraces Don Judd as well as Guston: "I want painters before me and after me."

Drawings provide the conduit between landscape and gesture

"Light as a container for the fluidity of emotion..."
(See "Liquid Rubens" on www.davidreedstudio.com/)

"The surfaces are cool but they're all about emotion."

Full view: "painting offers a way to stay human in this world."
His gesture: animate, caught for a moment

"We don't even know what painting will become," in that it has the capacity to humanize media in the way it humanized religion."



Early landscapes

Two verticals with color studies that serve as both templates and keys to the paintings

David Reed, painter and spokesman for all that painting can be, has a major retrospective at the Kunstmuseum Bonn. Visit the link below for a wonderful interview with Reed, from which many of the captions were taken. Reed's work, scholarship and (in his words) humanity, offers hope for painting's continued aesthetic and critical role and vitality, as is evidenced in these images. Check out the top painting, so close to Monet's late panel paintings at L'Orangerie and Marmatton Monet, though Reed loves the Italian Baroque.

Link to Heart of Glass and taped interview from which the above quotes were taken

Link to David Rhode's review of Reed's Heart of Glass at artcritical

Friday, August 17, 2012

Susanna Coffey Studio Preview: Alpha Gallery, Boston

Alpha Gallery Link
Susanna Coffey Website

It has been a while since I've spent time with painter Susanna Coffey, whom I've known since 1987. I visited her ex-schoolroom studio on a rainy Wednesday after her work had been photographed for an upcoming show at Alpha. Above, links to her Alpha Gallery artist page and personal website; below, images from her studio that form a preview of the show.

The paintings have changed radically, while retaining salient characteristics such as cropped portrait size, a large scale seen from close-to, subtle, but exciting color transitions and a "knit-painting" mark that is a cross between a horizontal dab and flick of the brush. The paintings are on cradled panel, but the overall effect of their facture is a soft density, built layer upon layer to achieve a rich earthiness.

In a talk at the Studio School some years ago, Susanna mentioned African masks and the way, after long bouts of painting, how self-portraiture 'disappears' within a larger construct. It was as if there comes a point when subject matter and content becomes secondary to the process of painting itself: direct communication with less attachment to means. At least this is how these new paintings seem; they are both portraits and not; we admire the paint, guffaw at exaggerated features and fall quiet before the prospect of a surface that contains both form and emptiness, and we move through these changes without effort.

A 2011 self portrait, a year in the making, might be the pivot for the turning away from the self-portraiture that occupied Coffey's work for the better part of a decade. Her renegotiation of terms includes landscape as a version of dissolved or dissolving form, a fusion to which monotypes from as far back as the 1990s begin to point. The vacillation between form and ground seems solid sometimes and other times, ephemeral. We look, and in the process become aware of the pleasure and mechanics of seeing. This fulfills the promise of the mask Coffey showed years ago, that magnifies awareness of how embodied experience resonates in the object, be it sculpture or painting.


The beautiful mask with "knit-painted" eyes and trim, all paintings approximately 15 x 13 inches, oil

Coffey Buddha

Self portrait merged with elements: a year's work

Similar to the monotype portraits, but with a literary character, perhaps?
This bear shows a camoflage technique Coffey has been using
Watercolor Buddha - gorgeous washes, but reflection took over

A figure/ground monotype with wrapped painting to the left

"Knit" landscape - a real beauty

Hard to close in, but look at that surface!


"The more I move away from the world, the more I want to be in it, painting"

Thursday, August 02, 2012

Michaelangelo Pistoletto, LAICA, December 15, 1979-January 18, 1980

Pistoletto website - text about the mirror paintings



From the website linked above:


"The mirror paintings are the foundation of Pistoletto’s oeuvre—both of the artworks he makes and of his theoretical reflection in which he constantly returns to them to study their meaning in depth and to develop their implications. The essential characteristics the artist identifies in them, are: the dimension of time (not just represented, but presented in reality); the inclusion in the work of the viewer and his/her surroundings (which make “the self-portrait of the world”); the joining of couples of opposite polarity (static/dynamic, surface/depth, absolute/relative, etc.), constituted and activated by the interaction between the photographic image and what goes on in the virtual space generated by the reflecting surface; the placement of the mirror paintings no longer at window height, as paintings are traditionally hung, but on the floor (which creates a passage through which the space in which they are shown continues in the virtual space of the work, a door that opens between art and life).
 

The mirror paintings were first exhibited in Pistoletto’s one-person show at Galatea in April 1963. A few days after the opening Pistoletto went to Paris, where he met the American dealer Ileana Sonnabend, who later bought the entire show and took over Pistoletto’s contract with Galatea.
“I realized there wasn’t any sort of assent or interest around me: in fact there was a certain nervousness and rejection, mainly by the gallery owner himself. So I took a trip to Paris. There I met Beppe Romagnoni who told me about a gallery where strange and interesting paintings were being shown. So I dropped by the Sonnabend Gallery and asked to see these paintings. In this way I first saw Rauschenberg, Jasper Johns, Rosenquist and Lichtenstein’s paintings, and Segal and Chamberlain’s sculptures. They asked me if I was a critic and I said, no, I’m an artist. When asked what I did, I showed them the Galatea catalogue and a painting. They were struck by the work and came to Turin where they bought up the whole Galatea show. They took over the contract with Tazzoli and a situation developed that was extremely important for me: from my isolation in Turin, I was catapulted into an international dimension” (Michelangelo Pistoletto, interview with Germano Celant, cit., 26-29).
The mirror paintings quickly brought Pistoletto international acknowledgement and success, which in turn led to numerous one-person shows in Europe and in the United States (Paris, 1964; Brussels and Minneapolis, 1966; New York, 1967 and 1969; Rotterdam, 1969)."

In Los Angeles, as an art student at UCLA, I saw Pistoletto's show at LAICA's South Robertson location (see history below). His website, linked above, states the show consisted of a different body of work, the Minus Objects, but I remember mirror paintings with a gold cast and screenprinted images. They are totally relevant to the work I'm making now; amazing how memory serves.


Los Angeles Institute of Contemporary Art, circa 1980

From LAICA's website:

"The Los Angeles Institute of Contemporary Art was formed between 1973-1974 to provide a permanent exhibition venue for the visual contemporary arts in the Los Angeles area. The founding principle was to establish an arts organization that operated democratically and spoke with a multiplicity of voices. In order to remain flexible and minimize operating expense, LAICA did not establish a permanent collection.
Members of the Board of Directors included Peter Alexander, John Baldessari, Rosamund Felsen, Peter Plagens, Judy Spence, and other artists, gallery owners, and members of the art community. Committees that supervised exhibition programming and LAICA's published Journal were elected by members, and the duties of exhibition curator and periodical editor rotated among members, rather than being the responsibility of permanent staff. A registry of slides and biographical materials, begun in 1971, was open to submission by any Southern California artist. LAICA's first exhibitions were held in the fall of 1974, under founding director Robert Smith, a former curator at the Brand Library and Art Center in Glendale, California. The first issue of Journal was published in June of the same year.
LAICA's first exhibition space consisted of 4,200 square feet on the fifth floor of the Century City complex. During the mid-1970s, the organization hosted numerous exhibitions and events - all were were well attended, despite the lack of parking and restrooms. Exhibitions focused on a wide variety of contemporary painting, sculpture, decorative arts, fashion, performance art, video, music, architecture, social issues, and public art. Exhibitions were curated by both LAICA staff and guest curators, including Walter Hopps. Desiring to expand their space, LAICA had hopes of Frank Gehry redesigning the Century City space. The institute, however, was forced to relocate after losing their lease.
In March of 1977, LAICA reopened in an 8,000 square foot facility on 2020 South Robertson Boulevard. In addition to their public programming, the organization created an Artist-in-Residence program with funding made available by the Comprehensive Employment Training Act (CETA). By the end of the 1970s, LAICA was flourishing with increased budget and staff, and, by 1980, opened a second exhibition space at 815 Traction Avenue, referred to as the "Downtown Gallery." An additional storefront exhibition space in the Eastern Columbia building was donated by State Senator Alan Sieroty.
A decrease in public funding in the early 1980s forced LAICA to cut some of its public programs. The organization, however, still staged ambitious exhibitions, including one of contemporary Italian art that traveled to nine different venues, and a show of nine contemporary Australian artists in connection with the 1984 Olympics Art Festival.
Robert Smith resigned from his position as director in early 1985. Ben Marks, the former director of the Center of Contemporary Art in Seattle, was hired that summer. By March of 1986, however, Marks had resigned and the Board of Directors decided to sell LAICA's South Robertson location. Faced with financial burdens and the lack of a permanent exhibition space, LAICA staged exhibits at temporary spaces around Los Angeles. The Los Angeles Institute of Contemporary Art officially closed in 1987 after thirteen years of operation."

Monday, July 23, 2012

A Day In Los Angeles

Saturday, July 21st: the perfect day to trek LA, starting at the Rose Cafe in Venice and ending in Studio City for dinner, via Culver City and downtown for shows and coffee. Lovely graphite drawings are on view at two group exhibitions: Angles,  Blum and Poe. There is a lively California Light and Space show at Nye & Brown. The Susanne Vielmetter exhibitions, Kevin Appel and Iva Gueorguieva, would be great to see in tandem with the works below.

Jonathan Borofsky, 1988 - Rose and Main Sts.
How much I loved this clown when first installed; its leg used to twirl, slowly and sadly.

James Gobel, 2011 at Angles Gallery's All I Want Is A Picture of You

The felt is more turquoise than photography allows in Sam, 45 x 40 inches, 2011

A very satisfying graphite portrait by Dan McCleary:
Eowyn Wilcox, 2010, approx. 14 x 11 inches


Me As a Boy, Me As a Girl, Eowyn Wilcox, 2011
approx. 17 x 23 inches

Ivan The Terrible by Mark Flores (2007), 15 x 22 inches
strange and wonderful handling of the material



Judie Bamber, Mom In Profile, 2012, 14 x 18

Bamber, detail

Patrick Lee, Deadly Friends (Head 9), 2011, 11 x 14 inches

Kurt Kauper, Obama study, 2009, 41 x 26 inches


From Yuval Pudik's Fallen Ecotones, 43 x 35 inches
(this is work that interests not only technically but for the subject matter)

Yuval Pudik, Detail

At Blum and Poe:
No Person May Carry a Fish Into a Bar curated by Julian Hoeber and Alix Lambert

Black and white together, painting and ceramic

From a
 quartet of gorgeous drawings

Another.
Rob Reynolds at Nye & Brown, 2011
oil, alkyd and acrylic gesso on canvas, approx. 20 x 24 inches


DeWain Valentine, Double Silver Disk, 1968
Fiberglass reinforced polyester, 64 x 64 x 56 inches
So beautiful with the drawings from the other shows...