ILLUMINATED LANDSCAPES
Transcription
ILLUMINATED LANDSCAPES
ILLUMINATED LANDSCAPES THE PAINTINGS OF DON RESNICK Front Cover: Coastal Path, oil on canvas, 47 x 60 in. ILLUMINATED LANDSCAPES THE PAINTINGS OF DON RESNICK May 25 - June 16, 2007 172 Davenport Road, Toronto, ON M5R 1J2, Canada T 416.962.0438 800.551.2465 F 416.962.1581 E info@odonwagnergallery.com www.odonwagnergallery.com Member of the Art Dealers Association of Canada ILLUMINATED LANDSCAPES: THE PAINTINGS OF DON RESNICK He who looks on nature with a ‘loving eye,’ cannot move from his dwelling without the salutation of beauty; even in the city the deep blue sky and drifting clouds appeal to him. And if to escape its turmoil—if only to obtain a free horizon, land and water in the play of light and shadow yields delight—let him be transported to those favored regions, where the features of the earth are more varied, or yet add the sunset, that wreath of glory daily bound around the world, and he, indeed, drinks from pleasure’s purest cup. Excerpt from Thomas Cole, ‘Essay on American Scenery.’ 1836 The conceptualization of nature leads sometimes to paradoxical conclusions, yet the relationship between man and his natural environment continues to be one that many artists strive to navigate. Don Resnick is one such artist who explores the expressive possibilities of landscape, and his oeuvre, spanning fifty years, reflects the very crux of the matter: that landscape is an ever-shifting, elusive construct. It has been the object of contemplation for as long as humans have been able to articulate their own subjectivity, and Resnick upholds the artistic tradition of granting the landscape aesthetic primacy. Landscape painting is a genre that only the bravest still pursue, and Resnick makes a strong argument for the appropriateness of the medium in conveying to the viewer the tactility, sensuousness, and dynamism of nature. The works in this exhibition convey to the viewer Resnick’s ardent faith in the restorative qualities of resting one’s eyes on a scene that demands very little in return. We are granted a glimpse of Resnick’s private moments, where he shares his personal experience of the land from which he gains so much fulfillment. If we acquire a new perspective on nature through nuances of light and space, or are even just reminded of its need for future protection, then Resnick is pleased. Ultimately, Resnick speaks to the mythic tradition of landscape, the idea that we are collectively defined by our environment; our habitus is rooted in this space; a notion that many take for granted—we cannot see the forest for the trees. Resnick takes pause, engages in the simple act of looking, and reminds us what we stand to miss in the lush, tranquil sublimity of the wilderness beyond the city. Light is a principal element in Resnick’s work, and the ephemeral qualities of the sun’s diluted rays upon the contours of land guide the viewer though the composition. In Coastal Path, we are dwarfed in comparison to the cluster of trees that stand before us. Patches of light illuminate the ground and create a visual path up, around, and finally down to the waters that lie below. Instantly, we are reminded of the Impressionists’ studies of light—its fluid, transient qualities—and their unprecedented technique of using a multitude of pigments to record the atmospheric energy of their surroundings. Uniquely, Resnick’s painterly strokes suggest his own presence in the scene—we get a sense of his reaction to what lay before him and witness how that is translated into the vast expanse of colour and texture before us. His deft, masterful brushwork creates a luminous transparency often achieved through watercolour techniques, and he works ‘alla prima’ to ensure that his canvases remain lucid and buoyant. Resnick works largely from memory and trusts instinct over concrete details of place. His spontaneous working methodology is what allows for such intensity of spirit in his painting. Resnick makes his preliminary sketches en plein air and uses those sketches in his studio, where he works in oils to capture that moment of inspiration from memory. Art historian Simon Schama comments that landscape can only be a human construct—it is a product of our culture, and exists in tandem with us. He notes that landscape is essentially a manifestation of the mind, and its scenery depends on our recollections of it as much as on geological formation. Since the formation of the word ‘landschap,’ by the Dutch in the sixteenth century, landscape came to reflect nature as mediated by human vision. With this in mind, it becomes clear that Resnick’s work is in fact a response to nature, and not a utopian attempt to recreate nature. Resnick’s practice recalls the Romantic tradition of understanding landscape as a vehicle for exploring our own emotional depths, and Damariscotta Lake is one such example where we are reminded of this fact. We survey a scene that extends magnificently into the distance, where the horizon meets the sky and embraces the coral light offered by the retreating sun. This “wreath of glory” illuminates the fields before us, and we cannot help but feel as if we have stumbled onto this vision at the most perfect moment. The sky is reminiscent of Turner or Constable, but we are sharing a scene that only Resnick could provide us with—we are allowed to meditate on a vision that is so personal yet speaks to something greater, more universal. Resnick uses the intimacy of place to articulate the powers of space. There is a tranquil solitude that connects Resnick’s works, and he refrains from placing any figures within his compositions. Understanding that a figure immediately calls attention to itself, detracting from the setting in which he or she is placed, Resnick chooses, for the present, to emphasize the abstract qualities of the land over those who might inhabit it. We are given only traces of human presence, through a cabin in the periphery or a cottage nestled into the shoreline—never do they encroach on the scenery. In Moonlight Toward Pemaquid, one of Resnick’s arresting nightscapes, we take note of a light flickering across the bay, but remain transfixed by the ethereal glow of the moon. To stand before this work is a mesmerizing experience. One shudders in anticipation of the slight chill in the air as the waves gently lap against the rocks at our feet. Falling into synch with our own breath, our own corporeality, we attempt to digest this visual feast. This is what we do with Resnick’s paintings—we are drawn into his scenes, lulled by the path it presents to us. Returning to Cole’s lofty prose that characterized the Hudson River School’s approach to painting, we recognize that Resnick departs from this tradition. Cole and his contemporaries presented the landscape with an idealized, formal, and spiritual reverence. The magnitude of these panoramas distance the viewer as subservient to nature. Resnick, thankfully, does the opposite. He takes us with him as he paints the most honest and unassuming landscapes—he uses his intimate knowledge of light’s idiosyncrasies to depict the unique spaces in which he meanders. Robert Hughes once said that space liberates, and Resnick reminds us of this every time we rest our gaze upon his illuminated scenes. Through Resnick’s paintings we exalt nature’s healing properties, and walk away with vision restored. - Jane Hutchison 1 American Art 1700-1960: Sources and Documents. Ed. John McCoubrey. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: PrenticeHall, 1965 1 Coastal Path oil on canvas, 47 x 60 in. 2 Unexpected Snow oil on canvas, 30 x 40 in. 3 Buoy oil on canvas, 47 x 65 in. 4 Saffron Sky oil on canvas, 47 x 65 in. 5 Looking West oil on canvas, 30 x 42 in. 6 Regards to Asher-Bash Bish Falls oil on canvas, 47 x 47 in. 7 A Mid-day Walk oil on canvas, 40 x 30 in. 8 Lone Pine oil on canvas, 28 x 36 in. 9 Through the Trees oil on canvas, 22 x 28 in. 10 Quiet Water oil on canvas, 45 x 55 in. 11 Islands Offshore oil on canvas, 36 x 36 in. 12 Amber Light oil on canvas, 28 x 36 in. 13 Harbour Island Builkhead oil on canvas, 47 x 65 in. 14 Towards Cushing oil on canvas, 47 x 60 in. 15 Moonlight - Towards Permaquid oil on canvas, 48 x 48 in. 16 Low Tide oil on canvas, 47 x 68 in. 17 Rivulet oil on canvas, 47 x 47 in. 18 Damariscotta Lake oil on canvas, 47 x 60” 19 Zero Degrees oil on canvas, 20 x 20 in. 20 Across the Bay oil on canvas, 47 x 66 in. BIOGRAPHY Don Resnick was born in New York City and currently lives and works on Long Island, NY A student of Oskar Kokoschka, Raphael Soyer, Seymour Lipton and Julian Levi. He attended Hobart College, Geneva, NY, The New School for Social Research, New York City, and the Internationale Akademie fur Bildende Kunst in Salzburg, Austria. SELECTED SOLO EXHIBITIONS 2005 2004 2002 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1991 1989 1988 1978 “Stillness + Solitude - The Light of Maine”, Round Top Center for the Arts, Damariscotta, ME “Works on Paper”, River Gallery, Damariscotta, ME “Inside/Outside”, Union college, Mandeville Gallery, Schenectady, NY “Sense of Place”, Odon Wagner Gallery, Toronto, Canada “Earth, Sea and Sky”, Odon Wagner Gallery, Toronto, Canada “Toward the Light”, Odon Wagner Gallery, Toronto, Canada “Overview”, Hobart College, Geneva, NY “Landscapes”, Wright Gallery, New York, NY “Heckscher Museum of Art at Bryant Library, Roslyn, NY “Poetry of His Painting”, Odon Wagner Gallery, Toronto, Canada “Remembered Light”, Andrea Marquit Fine Arts, Boston, MA “Light of Africa”, Andrea Marquit Fine Arts, Boston. MA “The Environment”, Elaine Benson Gallery, Bridgehampton, NY Nassau County Museum of Fine Art, Roslyn, NY “Sea, Sky and In-Between”, Elaine Benson Gallery, Bridgehampton, NY Gallery North, Setauket, NY Adelphi University, Garden City, NY Hofstra University, Hempstead NY SELECTED GROUP EXHIBITIONS 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 River Gallery, Damariscotta, ME “Recent Acquisitions”, Molloy College, Rockville Centre, NY “Local Color”, Gallery North, Setauket, NY “The Nude”, juried exhibition, The Century Association, NY “The Tradition Continues”, Hammer Galleries, New York, NY “Christmas Annual”, Greenhut Galleries, Portland, ME “The Little Continent of Long Island”, The Long Island Museum of American Art, Stony Brook, NY Century Artists, The Century Association, New York, NY Contemporary Artists, Hammer Galleries, New York, NY “Landscape at 40”, Gallery North, Setauket, NY Gallery Artists, Hammer Galleries, New York, NY “A Century of Collecting”, Heckscher Museum, Huntington, NY River Gallery Artists, Damariscotta, ME “Centurions Paint Centurians”, The Century Association, New York, NY “Recent Acquisitions”, Mint Museum of Art, Charlotte, NC “Expanding the Legacy”, Kresge Museum of Art, Michigan State University, Lansing MI “New England Art in Truman Hall”, U.S. Ambassador to NATO, Brussels, Belgium “Art in U.S. Embassy”, Skopje, Macedonia “New Work”, River Gallery, Damariscotta, ME “12th Annual Group Show”, Flanders Gallery, Minneapolis, MN Annual Group, Century Association, New York, NY “New at F.A.N.”, F.A.N. Gallery, Philadelphia, PA Annual Group, Century Association, New York, NY River Gallery, Damariscotta, ME “Local Color”, Gallery North, Setauket, NY “The Pisano Collection”, Long Island Museum of Art, Stonybrook, NY “The Landscape”, Flanders Gallery, Minneapolis, MN River Gallery, Damariscotta, ME “Local Color”, Gallery North, Setauket, NY “Morning, Noon and Night”, Long Island Museum of Art, Stony Brook, NY “Group Show 2000”, Wright Gallery, NY “Gallery Artists”, Wright Gallery, NY “Gallery Artists”, Wright Gallery, NY “Three Friends”, Gallery North, Setauket, NY “Poets and Artists: Collaborations and Connections”, Hutchins Gallery, C.W. Post University, Brookville, NY “Island Light”, Gallery North, Setauket, NY “In Good Company”, Hecksher Museum of Art, Huntington, NY “L.I. Artists Paint Maine”, Hutchins Gallery, C.W. Post University “Holiday Show”, Gallery North, Setauket, NY “Country Pleasures: Views of Long Island”, Heckscher Museum of Art, Huntington, NY “Out of Italy”, Gallery North, Setauket, NY “Artists’ Vision”, Firehouse Gallery, Nassau Community College, Garden City, NY “Five Over Five”, Hobart College, Geneva, NY “Local Color”, Gallery North, Setauket, NY “Local Color”, Gallery North, Setauket, NY “The Environment”, Elaine Benson Gallery, Bridgehampton, NY “The Environmentalists”, Gallery North, Setauket, NY Rubiner Gallery, West Bloomfield, MI 1992 1990 1989 1988 1987 1985 1984 1983 1980 1966 1965 1961 1960 1959 1958 Cove Gallery, Wellfleet, MA “Changing Landscapes”, Portland Museum of Art, Portland, ME “Rotations”, Andrea Marquit Gallery, Boston, MA “Local Color”, Gallery North, Setauket, NY “New Artists”, Odon Wagner Gallery, Scottsdale, AZ Rubiner Gallery, West Bloomfield, MI “Land and Sea”, J.S.Ames Fine Art, Belfast, ME Andrea Marquit Fine Arts, Boston, MA Turtle Gallery, Deer Isle Village, ME “Four Long Island Artists”, Martha Lincoln Gallery, Vero Beach, FL “Agricultural Cathedrals, Long Island Barns”, Gallery North, Setauket, NY Jayne Baum Gallery, New York, NY “Figurative Abstraction”- Graves, Diebenkorn, Resnick, Morley, Vadia, Andrea Marquit Fine Arts, Boston, MA Turtle Gallery, Deer Isle Village, ME Jayne Baum Gallery, New York, NY “Local Color”, Gallery North, Setauket, NY “Three Artists”, Isis Gallery, Port Washington, NY “Sunset”, David Findlay Jr. Gallery, New York, NY “Land and Sea Revisited”, Isis Gallery, Port Washington, NY “A Group Selection”, Country Gallery, Locust Valley, NY Art Association of Newport Rhode Island, Newport, RI Art Association of Newport Rhode Island, Newport, RI Kraushaar Galleries, New York, NY Corcoran Gallery, Lending Division, Washington, D.C. Kraushaar Galleries, New York, NY “New Talent”, Artists’ Gallery, New York, NY Lenox Gallery, Lenox, MA, curator Claes Oldenberg “New Talent”, Artist’s Gallery, New York, NY MUSEUMS AND OTHER COLLECTIONS Smith College Museum of Art, Northampton, MA Nassau County Museum of Art, Roslyn, NY Century Association, New York, NY Mint Museum of Art, Charlotte, NC The New York Public Library, New York, NY Colby College Museum of Art, Waterville, ME J.B.Speed Museum, Louisville, KY Bowdoin College Museum of Art, Brunswick, ME Currier Gallery of Art, Manchester, NH Hood Museum, Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH Hillwood Art Gallery, C.W. Post College, Greenvale, NY Hobart College Museum of Art, Geneva, NY Portland Museum of Art, Portland, ME Sheldon Memorial Art Gallery, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, NE Westmoreland Museum of Art, Greensburg, PA Williams College Museum of Art, Williamstown, MA Fred L. Emerson Gallery, Hamilton College, Clinton, NY University of Michigan Museum of Art, Ann Arbor, MI National Museum of American Art, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC The Farnsworth Art Museum, Rockland, ME Museum of Art, Ft. Lauderdale, FL Rose Art Museum, Brandeis University, Waltham, MA Heckscher Art Museum, Huntington, NY Long Island Museum of Art, Stonybrook, NY Bates College Museum of Art, Lewiston, ME Kresge Art Museum, Michigan State University, Lansing, MI National Archives of American Art U.S. Department of State Purchase, Tashkent Embassy, Uzbekistan Union College, Mandeville Gallery, Schenectady, NY Telfair Museum of Art, Savannah, GA N. Illinois University Art Museum, Dekalb, IL Molloy College, Rockville Centre, NY Art in Embassies Program, Dept. of State: (Two paintings selected by Ambassador Dodd for the American Embassy in Uruguay) Ambassador Mickey Kantor (painting on loan from the National Museum of American Art) American Capital Resources Inc. American Re-Insurance, New York, NY Carter-Wallace, New York, NY IBM, New York, NY Avis Collection, World Headquarters, Westbury, NY Klett Publishers, Stuttgart, Germany Nippon Kodo, New York, NY Nippon Kodo, Tokyo, Japan Price-Waterhouse, New York, NY Touche Ross, New York, NY Fidelity Investments, Boston, MA Harvest Management, New York, NY Residence of Thomas J. Dodd, U.S. Ambassador to Costa Rica: (five works in exhibition, “Flora, Fauna, Landscape Art”) Residence of NATO Ambassador Nicholas Burns, Brussels, Belgium Residence of NATO Ambassador to Macedonia, Skopje; Gabarone, Botswana Residence of U.S. Delegate to Havanna, Cuba AWARDS, HONORS AND COMMISSIONS Elected to membership: Century Association “Creative Impulse” – Guest Artist – Symposium, Hobart College, Geneva, NY 2000 Hobart College Alumni Association, Medal of Excellence 1999 Long Island Art Teachers’ Association, First Prize, Watercolor Millay Colony Foundation for the Arts Elected Member, Artists Fellowship and New York Artists Equity Visiting Artist, C.W. Post Print Dept. Visiting Artist, Union College, Schenectady, NY Nassau County Museum of Fine Art, Slide Talk Stonybrook Museum, “Artists and Poets, Creative Forces Interpreting Long Island”, Panelist Program Illustrations and Spot Drawings for the Waldorf Chamber Players Drawings for Orion Magazine Published Posters by:Graphique de France, Boston, MA Modernart Editions, New York, NY Color Q., Dayton, OH CNN Television Interview, “Loaned Art” with Virginia Mecklenburg American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters – Nominated for an Award, 1982 & 1986 REVIEWS, PUBLICATIONS AND REPRODUCTIONS Currently collaborating with Louis Simpson, Pulitzer Prize winning poet, on a forthcoming book of poems, memoirs and drawings. 2007 “Gallery Artists”, Catalogue, Hammer Galleries, NY “Native Lands”, Catalogue for Permanent Collection of the Embassy of the U.S., Tashkent, Uzbekistan 2006 “The Tradition Continues”, Hammer Galleries Catalogue, New York, NY 2005 Contemporary Artists Catalogue, Hammer Galleries, New York, NY “An Ecstasy of Place”, Orion Magazine, Mar/April “Inside/Outside”, Catalogue, Union College, Schenectady, NY “Stillness + Solitude - The Light of Maine”, The Lincoln County News – August 4, 2005, Damariscotta, ME 2004 Odon Wagner Catalogue, “A Sense of Place”, Essay: Peter Clothier Multifaith Calendar, Cover and July; Cole’s Country 2003 Book Cover for “The Owner of the House – New Collected Poems, 1940-2001”, Louis Simpson, published by B.O.A. Editions New England Art Catalogue U.S. Embassy Exhibition, NATO, Brussels Catalogue for U.S. Embassy Exhibition, Skopje, Macedonia 2002 Archives of American Art Journal, Vol. 40 # 3 & 4, “Resnick Papers”, Avis Berman Odon Wagner Catalogue, “Earth, Sea and Sky”, Essay by Peter Clothier Long Island Museum of Art Bulletin, May, “Ron Pisano Collection” 2001 Hobart and William Smith Colleges, Spring Issue, Pulteney Street Survey 2000 Book cover for Louis Simpson’s “Francois Villon’s The Legacy and the Testament- (A Bilingual Edition)”, translated by Louis Simpson Where Toronto Magazine: “Resnick at Odon Wagner”, By Betty Ann Jordan Book Covers for Louis Simpson’s Memoirs “The King My Father’s Wreck” and a book of poems, “There You Are”, published by Story Line Press “Donald Resnick - Drawings”, text by Louis Simpson, Grenfell Press, Printed by Trifolio, Verona, Italy. edition of 500, signed and numbered “Poets and Artists – Collaborations and Combinations”, C.W. Post Library, Long Island, NY, Cynthia Jay, editor 1999 “The Eye of God, A Life of Oskar Kokoschka”, by Susanne Keegan, Bloomsbury Press 1998 “The Best of Drawing and Sketching”, Terry Sullivan, Rockport Publishers N.Y. Times, Helen Harrison, June 9 Three Village Herald, Susan Bridson, May 27 1997 N.Y. Times, Phyllis Braff, January 12 “Country Pleasures, Views of Long Island”, Heckscher Museum of Art Newsletter “In Good Company”, Heckscher Museum of Art Newsletter 1996 Odon Wagner Gallery Catalog, “The Poetry of Don Resnick”, Essays by Louis Simpson, Charles Parkhurst Andrea Marquit Fine Arts Catalog, “Long Island Landscape, The Artist’s Vision” American Artist, “From Eye, to Heart, to Hand”, Terry Sullivan, August 1995 N.Y. Times, “Local Color”, Helen Harrison, August 20 Andrea Marquit Fine Arts Catalog, “Remembered Light”, Essay by Louis Simpson 1994 Charles Parkhurst, Introductory Catalog Essay The Boston Globe, “Light of Africa”, Nancy Stapin, February 3 1993 1992 1990 1989 1988 1987 1985 1983 1982 1961 1959 1958 The Boston Herald, “Artist Illuminates Africa”, Joanna Silver, February 6 Andrea Marquit Fine Arts Catalog, “Light of Africa” Long Island Life, May N.Y. Times, “Nature Based Landscapes”, Helen Harrison, January 23 Hobart and William Smith Colleges, “Landscape as Expression”, Pulteney Review, Winter Orion Nature Quarterly, Winter N.Y. Times, “A Venerable Gallery Keeps High Standards”, Helen Harrison, June 17 Graphique de France Catalog Nassau Museum of Fine Arts Catalog, “Long Island Artists” N.Y. Times, “A Broad Spectrum, Nassau County Museum”, Helen Harrison, February 19 East Hampton Star, “Landscapes at Elaine Benson”, Eric Ernst, July 6 Newsday, “Long Island Artists’ Exhibition” Karen Lipson, February 3 Modernart Editions Catalog N.Y. Times, “More than a Scenery Show”, Helen Harrison, September 13 Newsday, “Island Landscapes”, Malcolm Preston, February 9 N.Y. Times, “Long Island Scene”, Phyllis Braff, January 27 Newsday, “Painting Reproduced”, Malcolm Preston, May 6 Newsday, “Six Artists Take A Look At Nature”, Malcolm Preston, June 7 N.Y. Times, “Celebrating Land And Sea”, Phyllis Braff, June 5 Raphael Soyer, Introduction to exhibition brochure Arts, November Art News, Natalie Edgar, November The New Yorker, The Art Galleries, June 13 N.Y. Times, Artists’ Gallery Submissions, Dore Ashton CREDITS CURATORS Odon Wagner Rafael Wagner Laura Peturson INTRODUCTION Jane Hutchison GRAPHIC DESIGN Angela Wagner PHOTOGRAPHY Odon Wagner PRINTING Caractera, Quebec “Illuminated Landscapes: The Paintings of Don Resnick” ISBN 978-0-9781635-5-6 National Library of Canada Copyright: Odon Wagner Gallery Note: This catalogue is also available on our website 172 Davenport Road, Toronto, ON M5R 1J2, Canada T 416.962.0438 800.551.2465 F 416.962.1581 E info@odonwagnergallery.com W www.odonwagnergallery.com