REDACTED is an exploration
of the way contemporary artists amend and transform
original content through alterations,
erasures, reductions and cutaways in the visual experience. The Oxford English
Dictionary defines the word redact as
“to edit”,
as in preparing a document for publication. But the term has acquired
broader
meaning since the 20th century, inferring acts, often
political, of obfuscation,
disinformation, censorship and conspiracy.
foreground: Stacy Fisher; background: Jonathan Callan |
Today, the word “redacted” has implications that
stretch beyond blacked out C.I.A. documents. Deletions or disinformation – redactions – in nonfiction can have
the
effect of turning truth into fantasy and excision or concealment in
written,
auditory, or film and video material might alter history,
obscure entire
hypotheses or convert, disguise
or transform content.
In the visual brain, imagery can be eclipsed by ocular migraines or sun blindness resulting in a redacted visual field, and in psychology, trauma can result in whole areas of memory that cease to be accessible.
But since 1953, when Robert Rauschenberg spent that long month erasing one of Willem de Kooning’s favorite drawings, the idea of redaction has been central to the concept of altered content in visual art.
Eric Dever’s serial paintings examine strict color
equations. Elemental and exacting, Dever limits his color use to fixed degreesof Napthol scarlet, Titanium white and Ivory black. The color range –
stupefying in its expansiveness – pulses in fields of geometric precision.
Eric Dever installation; Stacy Fisher's Black and White Objects foreground |
NSIBTW-34, 2014, courtesy Berry Campbell Gallery |
The act of erasing, transmuting or removing
subject matter is something that comes naturally to the visual artist -- one
might even posit that it is an inevitable part of the creative process. Josh Blackwell transforms the lowly plastic bag into luscious, fetishized objects –
repositories, if you will, that revitalize some of our most
ubiquitous cultural
scraps.
Josh Blackwell, Plastic Basket (Crystal), 2013 |
A native of Louisiana, Blackwell was witness to Katrina as well as the
massive
debris field left in its wake, and the experience caused a shift in his thinking.
debris field left in its wake, and the experience caused a shift in his thinking.
Enter the plastic bag, so vilified in modern culture yet so
indispensible
to commerce, reanimated with sumptuous fields of ornamentation.
to commerce, reanimated with sumptuous fields of ornamentation.
Josh Blackwell |
Linda Miller explores negative space in a
series of graphite bowls that act as
surrogates for corporeality, identity, presence and absence.
surrogates for corporeality, identity, presence and absence.
Linda Miller, Ashes and Air, 2013-2014 |
In Brian Gaman’s Untitled,
the visual field is so deeply in focus that sight itself is recalibrated to the
infinite.
Brian Gaman, Untitled, 2014 |
Stacy Fisher, Black and White Objects, 2009 |
Stacy Fisher conceals the objecthood within her sculpture to such a
degree it seems whole concepts might be buried within her inky, bulging forms.
Lauren Luloff, Flame Violet with Window, 2013, Foley Barn, 2012 |
Lauren Luloff employs a similar
resourcefulness in the use of recycled bed sheets
that serve as her blank canvasses. Her study of textile design and block printing
in India come full circle here, manifest in patchwork paintings that are
variously stretched over frames or hung from the ceiling.
that serve as her blank canvasses. Her study of textile design and block printing
in India come full circle here, manifest in patchwork paintings that are
variously stretched over frames or hung from the ceiling.
Leaf, 2014 |
Luloff paints in oils or with a bleachy
composite, selectively removing pigment
in splashy, reflexive drawings that are assembled in compositions of bold pastiches, translucent scrim and gossamer swathes of fabric.
in splashy, reflexive drawings that are assembled in compositions of bold pastiches, translucent scrim and gossamer swathes of fabric.
Ryan Wallace, Redacted 2.14 I, 2013, courtesy Susan Inglett Gallery |
In Ryan Wallace’s Redactor
series, the vestiges of earlier works assemble like DNA strands as they
form a wholly new but relational family of paintings in which studio scraps
accumulate across the painting surface like glacial striations.
Bonnie Rychlak's use of recycled wax is also regenerative.
As a raw material, wax is distinctively malleable, and here it retains the evidence
As a raw material, wax is distinctively malleable, and here it retains the evidence
of former works in composites of marbled color bands that shift from sea foam
to translucent jade green.
Sharon Butler (foreground), Air quality control, 2013 |
Sharon Butler’s paintings are an ode to the new casualism (a term she coined) – a
concept linked aesthetically to wabi sabi
– the Japanese embracement
of imperfection or impermanence.
of imperfection or impermanence.
Cement Mixer, 2012 |
Butler paints on unstretched or partially
stretched raw canvas that is often a helter skelter of staples, bare stretcher
bars and loose threads. But her imagery, at once highly specific and at the
same time largely unidentifiable, asserts a structural, even architectural
level of observation that charges the pictorial space with positive and
negative visual data.
Jim Lee, Untitled (Rose Edge Relief), 2013, courtesy Nicelle Beauchene Gallery |
Jim Lee’s paintings assume a somewhat parallel process, with imagery that is inseparable from action.
Untitled, (Tuck and Cover), 2012, courtesy Nicelle Beauchene Gallery |
Defining the picture field and its content with a frankness that
is physical, experimental
and utterly unique in form, Lee’s works examine the formal aspects
of painting and sculpture while quietly serving to overthrow them.
Jonathan Callan, Zurbaran's Color Plates, 2001, courtesy Josee Bienvenu Gallery |
In Jonathan Callan’s arresting work, Zurbaran’s Color Plates,
the artist transfigures the book form into a revelation of
component parts, chiseling away
at its original content until
it is transformed into his own, in an act of both
insolence and intellectual finesse.
Ross Watts, Journey to the East, 2014, courtesy Sara Nightingale Gallery |
Likewise, RossWatts has mined the written word in Journey
to the East in which eleven Hermann Hesse novels are imbedded in concrete
bricks of beach sand collected from the shoreline of his Long Island home.
For
Watts, the process is a conundrum that places both his art as well as Hesse’s
content, in peril.
Ryan Steadman, Yves at Brunch, 2014 |
Ryan Steadman, installation view |
Ryan Steadman’s ersatz book forms act as painterly doppelgangers
-- proxies
for the written word. At first glance the paintings look like
collectibles in book form
but there are few, if any, visible words -- no title,
no author and no publisher – only
the form itself. Steadman’s paintings offer a
whimsical departure
from the information overload of our time.
Stefana McClure, Redacted (Enhanced Techniques), 2010, courtesy Josee Bienvenu Gallery |
Stefana McClure fragments aspects of language in knitted compositions made from surreptitious reportings such as shredded CIA documents.
The declassified papers, heavily redacted, detail the use of
“enhanced interrogation techniques,” such as waterboarding, one of this country’s most disturbing and
clandestine episodes. Her interventions are both beguiling and unnerving.
Stefana McClure, possible side effects may include (Zoloft), 2010, courtesy Josee Bienvenu Gallery |
McClure transforms the disclaimers included in every prescription of Zoloft, the world's most prescribed anti-depressant, in Side Effects May Include (Zoloft), above, in a complex examination of the pharmaceutical industry.
Mathias Schmeid, Background, 2006 |
In Background, Mathias Schmeid explores
another media form altogether – the adult magazine. His facile knife work transfigures
the imagery and its controversial nature into a delicate waterfall of cascading
lines.
Tim Spelios, Saint Sebastian, 2009 |
Tim Spelios reorders the history of art in collages that deftly
rearrange the visual information and the context held within in some of the
most celebrated paintings of the western world.
Letha Wilson, Brown's Park Violet, 2013 |
And Letha Wilson’s photographic works of
the American west reveal the majesty of our geologic past while fracturing it
with fierce, tactical interdictions. Her use of poured concrete, slices of
lumber and sharp cutaways lend a raw physicality to the artist’s travel photos,
as if they have actually been morphed into a gorge along the Colorado River.
2 great reviews:
Karin Lipson in the New York Times
Gabrielle Selz on Hamptons Art Hub
R E D A C T E D
April
13 – June 1, 2014
1 comment:
Looks like a really interesting show. Congratulations to all
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