review of exhibitions
Transcription
review of exhibitions
REVIEW OF EXHIBITIONS ham to Petah Coyne, Fred Wilson, Josiah McElheny and Joseph Grigely, suggesting a metaphor for lost elegance. In Simmons's hands, the delicate forms reinforce a larger message that wafts free of the confines of the work's theoretical framework. The drawings offered a fragile beauty and scent of nostalgia, and perhaps that should have been enough. —Eleanor Heartney Joseph Marioni at Peter Blum flank a central, contrasting section. Weighty eggplant-color bands bookend the dominant expanse—smoggy. vaguely vegetal—formed by a terre verte glaze rolled out over a pale, sugary violet. The earth green is stretched thin toward the top of this 10-by-11-foot work, where little fissures in the membrane, like runs in a nylon stocking, reveal the underlying violet. The gradual, top-to-bottom shift in density is insignificant at close range but distinct from a dozen yards distant. The viewer is grateful for these more subtle visual incidents, for there true drama lurks, not in the histrionics of cascading pigment, or the quest, now a bit dated, for a Greenbergian fusion of paint and support. With five hulking, dour paintings, each billed as "Painting, 2006" and "acrylic and linen on There was also a tall, dark stretcher," Joseph Maripainting and a smaller, pale one. View of Gary Simmons's exhibition "1964, • showing (left to right) In the Blink of an Eye and Reflection of a Future Past, both 2006: at the Bohen Foundation. oni somberly inaugurated The vagaries of the dark paintPeter Blum Chelsea. As ing's ragged, 11-by-10-foot surface reveal undercoats of orange he has for decades, the and green, but in aggregate the artist {or "The Painter," as he up the whole of a red-painted NEW YORK palette yields a light-sucking identifies himself) applies three room, consisted of a scattering reddish-black, hot and roiling. At or four coats of color to a canvas of grand chandeliers cribbed Gary Simmons with a roller that he wields without nearly 7 feet square, the smallest from the 1964 Hitchcock thriller at the Bohen Foundation Mamie. These elaborate objects a trace of irony. The paintings are painting's scrimlike, near-white appeared to be greatly agitated, bigger, and the paint looser, than top coat muffles underlying chifPlaying on the poetics of fon yellow and mossy green, and before, and now the top layer is absence, Gary Simmons applied as they slid across corners and mimics the light-filtering effect of threatened to slip out of the frame typically thinned to a glaze, a film to enormous walls at the Bohen the frosted-glass window next of ceiling and wall altogether. through which the penultimate Foundation three of his signato which it was positioned. Taken together, the three draw- application is filtered. The tug of ture "erased" pictures. The title ings were studies in motion and gravity allies Marioni with Morris of the show, "1964," provided a The conspicuous absence of disappearance, presenting halfLouis, Norman Bluhm. even Paul artificial illumination in the galcontext for the otherwise enigrealized forms that seemed to be matic chalk drawings. Barely Jenkins, but rather than imparting lery, which sports four large recognizable forms in blurry lines spinning themselves into oblivion. a sense of weightlessness to the skylights, struck a sanctimonious In the context of the cited year, stretched across vast monopaintings, the tradesmanlike facnote. To be sure, these paintings they offered a nice metaphor for chrome grounds. Each incorture and glossy surfaces empha- are primarily concerned with the the fading of historical memory, porated imagery dating from size the works' massiveness. unadulterated apprehension of in which once-concrete objects 1964 chosen to represent the color, and lighting them so as Cn the gallery's rear wall was and events melt away to nothing strangely dissonant consciousto avoid chromatic distortions— more than faint palimpsests. One one of three horizontal paintings ness of that pivotal year. "visual pollution," in Marioni's in which darker margins, a layer couldn't help feeling, however, phrase—is critical. But visitors on A blue wall lay beneath a that a bit too much theoretical heft or two beneath the final "skin," representation of white, mushwas being lowered onto these room-shaped towers. Like all the feathenweight forms. Do they realThree of Joseph Marioni's paintings, ail 2006, acryiic on iinen; at Peter Bium. images here, these were renly, as the press release suggests, dered with sweeping marks that "recall the confrontational moment suggested rotational movement. at which the austere ModernThe towers were titled Reflection ist aesthetic simultaneously of a Future Past, a phrase poeti- embraced the political and racial cally evoking their source in the intolerance of preceding decades once-futunstic towers of the 1964 and marked the burgeoning era World's Fair New York Pavilion, of reaction and revolution"? designed by Philip Johnson, which still stands on its original More than social revolution or site in Flushing Meadow Park in retrenchment, these ephemeral Queens. The title gave them poi- drawings brought to mind an gnancy, recalling a moment when array of art-historical precedents, these Utopian relics were new. from Beuys's blackboards to Rauschenberg's erased de KoonThe nearby green wall contained In the Blink of an Eye, with ing drawing. The chandeliers, meanwhile, join a host of recent equally kinetic but less distinctive rectangular structures based and not-so-recent fixtures in works by artists ranging from on Johnson's Glass House. Ross Bleckner and Rodney GraThe final drawing, which took 188 October2006 Selected from what appears to be an ongoing series depicting swimmers in generic, photogenic moments, two paintings dated 2006 show figures in endless expanses of water. The 58-by126-inch Frieze depicts men and women at play in impossibly blue water, an abundant froth rushing onto some unseen shore. Closer in, the 57-by-87-inch The Wave locates four young women standing in shallow water as they turn away into the middle distance where a rolling wave forms, anticipating the possibility of a pictorial resolution of figures wholly subsumed. these adventurous pursuits. The 40 pages of the somewhat larger Nightfall include images drawn in black ballpoint as well as text, and feature the silhouette of a trophy home—an emblem of the introduction of the vernacular to a coastal scrub of chaparral. Above is a full moon and a night sky that is a field of obsessive markings, with named stars like white holes burning in the darkness. Bound in rugged nylon, the 20 pages in the 126-by-56-by-33-inch work titled Field Charts for Seleoted Boulder Problems rest on a collapsible chart table reminiscent of campaign furnishings designed —Edward Leffingweil for use in the field. The pages feature large drawings of boulPeter Rostovsky: Landscape for Another (1), 2006, oil on linen, 42 by 56 inches; Russell Crotty ders to be scaled, interspersed at The Project. with vellum overlays of routes atCRG marked in color, each positing In the tradition of the livre solutions to the ascent problem. a dark day were out of luck. (In ungainly posture associated with d'artiste, Russell Crotty obsesfajrness, I should note that Marjdigital cameras—arms extended, sively annotates hand-drawn field The paths of greatest difficulty are drawn in red. Such drawings oni offered to turn on the lights the screen viewed at a distance. books and charts useful for scalare annotated with observations for me. I declined, and returned Here, Rostovsky represents the ing boulders and tracking celestial concerning tests of endurance, when the weather improved.) eclipse of the traditions of both phenomena. (The objects shown including "good problem at the Though these paintings are landscape painting and landscape were dated 2006.) Relatively lower camp ground—a freaky not properly monochrome (nor photography—the countdown at small in the context of this exhibi- downclimb." Turned here by polychrome: Barbara Rose's the end of the Kodak moment. tion, Crotty's linen-bound, ink and white-gloved gallery assistants, "plurichrome" hits home), they Several paintings from his cycle watercolor on paper Twtiight in the pages can also be rolled up dispense, as do monochrome of "blind" landscapes recall the the West opens to a span of 14'/2 in purpose-built carrying tubes. paintings, with figure/ground atmosphere of mid-19th-century by 31 inches on a shelf designed The roughly 68-by-124-by-68relationships. But whereas in American painting and seem to for its presentation. Regarding inch apparatus of Field Charts monochrome (and other manifes- commemorate it with a record of himself as an observer midway for Nocturnal Recreations was tations of the "abstract sublime") its vanishing: the landscapes of between earth and sky. Crotty designed for the transport, storthe picture plane is read as all this series fade into grisaille, as prints in unaffected capital letters: age and display of 10 expansive ground and no figure, these, in rivers, mountains and skylines are "Winter Joshua Tree. Cold north drawings focusing on named and their relentless edge-to-edge softened to a point near obliterawind howls out of the mountains. numbered stars, each paired with forward pressure, come at you tion. Three 18-by-24-inch, oil-onSirius the brightest star rises a related vellum overlay. The all at once: all figure. They comlinen "Blind Landscapes" reveal above the huge boulder formaassistants offered each sheet in mandeer the neutral white wall mountainous terrain from different tions." Crotty writes of both the as ground. A cradle that locates perspectives, the first focusing on boulder and the night sky. a nota- turn, lifting it carefully over a roll that cradled the pages previously eaoh canvas a few inches fora horizon defined by trees in the tion that introduces his interest viewed. Here were galactic clusward of the wall heightens this middle distance, the second on in bouldering, a relatively safe, ters, numbered stars, the Milky effect. And the work's resulta view from a ridge overlooking problem-solving sport useful as Way writ large, followed by a ing deference to the gallery's a river, the third on mountains high-jmpact training for climbshort list of its spiral arms, familarchitecture, even more than its receding into the distance. ers. He leads the viewer on an iar Orion. Cygnus and Perseus. humorlessness, is its greatest expedition into sites ideal for Rostovsky's 42-by-56-inoh liability. —Stephen Maine Landscape for Another (1) and (2), both 2006, iterate paintings Russeil Crotty: Field Charts for Nocturnal Recreations, 2006. ink and watercolor of the Hudson River Valley as Peter Rostovsky on paper and vellum, bound in nylon, on table, 68 by 124 by 67'A inches; at CRG. though the paintings had been at The Project mounted on a wall and photoOver the past five years or so, graphed at an oblique angle. Peter Rostovsky has produced The first limns an expanse of still "Epiphanies," an ironic, narrawater from a rock-strewn cove tive-oriented series of works in the foreground to a forest consisting of small, sculpted reflected in the water in the dispolymer-clay figures on pedestance as the painting itself seems tals facing wall-hung landscape to recede. In the second, a wide paintings. In this recent exhibition, river is seen from far above, a he included a single example, herbaceous border in the foreEpiphany Model: The Photogra- ground along the base of the pher (2006), whose eponymous, picture plane. Down below in freestanding subject is dwarfed by the darkness is an interrupted a luminous oil-on-linen, 88-by-42- line of minute incidents painted inch landscape depicting bands in reddish yellow—an offhand, of mountains receding in the photorealist representation of distance. The 6-inch-tall Sculpey what may be the lights of houses figure holds his camera in the or passing cars.