Wednesday, July 1, 2009

A bang with the works

One of the more unusual ways to create a drawing...in seeing images of these being created, Rosemarie Fiore uses fireworks in concentration to make these concentric circles and worm like images...it is possible to categorize this as gimmick painting, but the end result is so interesting...layered and dense with information...sometimes the end justifies the means...

This piece specifically, Firework Drawing #23, has a nice blend of burn and neutrals with lurid color...as an abstract piece, this is visually successful with loud color balls bouncing and flowing around the picture plane...it reminds me of how Pollack tried to control the drips...the spontaneity of the burn marks and colored scorches creates a visual explosion...I think that is another aspect that draws me to this work - conceptually, there is a close tie between the material and the mark making...it doesn't try to be something it's not...this is a testament to the artist and her desire to stay true to the work...

Tuesday, June 30, 2009

The old is new


The tangled web of organic material, creating a solid mass of colorful flesh...Erik Parker has done an amazing job in this colorful, hyper decorative portrait...The context of the portrait, referencing the religious donor portraits...the style also alludes to the works of Jim Nutt, but with a urban, street twist...

The placement is central and frontal, visually we are focused on one and only symmetrical form...the concentric, halo form around the head is complex and unusual, not expected and dynamic...it is geometric and hard edged to contrast the drippy line forms in the head to create interest...the angle of the stripes visually carry the eye around...darker values behind to head to recede the shapes into space...bright and intense hues pull the viewer to the front and continue to the focus to the foreground...

The graphic, hard edge quality is interesting in contrast to the fragmented, organic line masses...creating an overall contemporary feel on a very traditional context...

Monday, June 29, 2009

Beyond the sums

Brazilian Artist Stephan Doitschinoff or "CALMA," often uses biblical themes and sensibilities, like the highly symbolic work of the Byzantines and early Gothic...each image has a reason, a symbolic message to the viewer...Calma's work departs from those kinds of works by choosing imagery from the street, juxtaposing it with decorative elements and stylized commercial line quality...this piece does an excellent job of taking the dirty and fragmented urban jungle and places it the context of higher art...

Often times high art has an error of snobbery too it, as if it cannot be reached by the common person, but the combination of accessible religious imagery, pattern and smart formal arrangement make this piece a great success...the background has a quiet undulating feeling...soft but complex...and the action of the figurative element in the foreground uses strong angles and geometries to create drama in contrast to the mostly mono-chromatic backdrop...the touches of white under the figure and in the red environment carries the eye around and ties this piece strongly together...

I enjoy the religious references and the contemporary context...the whole says a great deal more than the sum of its parts...

Friday, June 26, 2009

Neonized nature

Explosive color and movement of organic flowing hue masses...combined with the rays of angularity...the work of Hannah Stouffer is energetic and at times haunting...strange reptilian forms quietly roll across the burning landscape...I like the balance of representational and abstract imagery...these elements seem to exist in harmony, with neither over powering the other...

The dark background in contrast to the white areas creates visual tension...the repetition of circular and arrow forms moves the viewer around the picture planes like fingers pointing...look here and then look there...the way she develops the abstract, flowing washes in this piece entitiled Black Roses, is interesting and effective...this piece is loud and urban, a piece of bright nature in an otherwise, concrete, dark context...

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Something awkward this way comes


Something about this conceptual piece resonates with me...a foreboding and sense of strange balance, as if on a tightrope...I must walk carefully or thousands of small little lives will be lost...the baby forms, however disconnected we can make ourselves, still say something difficult to accept...we are trapped and dominated by the male form...

There is also something obviously awkward about the male form and how it cannot seem to move throughout space...it to is trapped by the babies...it reminds me of the fence metaphor, is a fence meant to keep us out or trap them inside? So the "kept" symbiotic relationship is in tact and unrelenting...the figure cannot engage and the babies cannot disengage...limbo and detante...a fragile truce, but one we assume will be broken...kinetically, they cannot go on forever stuck in the moment...Phil Toledano has done an excellent job stopping time in this piece...there are several in the series entitled, "Hope and Fear." I cannot wait to see what happens in the space between...

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Without a net


What happens next? The destruction of the precious, the loss of the hopeful...these kinds of works that undo themselves, I think are very successful in undermining our arrogant sense of permanence...so what is next after we loose the feeling of living forever? Maybe, it is our only chance at really living...without a net and without supports...

A painting that became a sculpture, beyond the conceptual underpinnings of the transformation...there exists a really good work of art...the way the piece struggles to hang off the wall, the color scheme, inclusive of the burnt and twisted areas...they are harmonious in a defiant context...there is also interesting shadows created by the twisted form...adding to the mood and success of the piece...

Valerie Hegarty does a great job formally, tieing all the elements together, this piece, Niagara Falls, takes a representational painting and breaks it down into its most simplistic, formal elements...the viewer transitions out of the representational picture plane and into the three-dimensional world...a world free and uncertain...

Monday, June 22, 2009

The Devil is in the details

Drawing and drawing and more drawing...this obsessive exploration by the Elvis Studio is rhythmical and detailed...holy cow there is a lot going on in this image...it is part of a series of works on the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse...there is a certain frenetic energy in these kinds of works, they are unique and laden with minutia...slow down and really look at drawings like these...they go beyond the large sweeping movements of the Abstract Expressionist...they are not meant to be inhaled, but to be savored...

Difference in scale is incrementally narrow compared to traditional works, but if you were to focus in on an 18th or 19th Century cornucopia, you might see this much visual information...simplified and uniform marking creates visual harmony...larger black forms spread throughout the picture plane carries the eye around...exploring darker ideas and developing uncommon relationships...