"Hommage a Martin Barre": Galerie Nathalie Obadia."Idees de la peinture: Hommage a Martin Barre" (Ideas of Painting: An Homage to Martin Barre), curated by Jean-Pierre Criqui, allows us to revisit a painter whose work is displayed all too infrequently relative to its importance. From one series to another, in ten paintings made by Barre between 1960 and 1991, the tools employed change (the paint tube itself, the spray gun, then a return to the brush), as do the forms (lines, bands or stripes, arrows, and truncated triangles or rectangles), but these variations only confirm the rigor rigor /rig·or/ (rig´er) [L.] chill; rigidity. rigor mor´tis the stiffening of a dead body accompanying depletion of adenosine triphosphate in the muscle fibers. and continuity of the artist's tireless investigation into the fundamental givens of painting. Throughout his experiments, one constant emerges immediately: the importance of blank space Noun 1. blank space - a blank area; "write your name in the space provided" space, place surface area, expanse, area - the extent of a 2-dimensional surface enclosed within a boundary; "the area of a rectangle"; "it was about 500 square feet in area" , which cannot be described as a void, since it is active, or as background, insofar in·so·far adv. To such an extent. Adv. 1. insofar - to the degree or extent that; "insofar as it can be ascertained, the horse lung is comparable to that of man"; "so far as it is reasonably practical he should practice as Barre gives it the same status as forms and color. In the radicalism of black and white, his will to limit the usual contradictions, starting with the dichotomy between background and form, is clearly affirmed: the sometimes crisp, sometimes nebulous edges, achieved with spray paint and a piece of cardboard (67-F-2-113 x 105, 1967), the erasures and overpainting '''Overpainting by definition must be done over some type of underpainting, in a system of working in layers. If the underpainting is like a base rhythm in music, then the overpainting is like the solo. , the interplay of positive and negative (87-89-81 x 144-C, 1987-89)--all these are so many ways of avoiding hierarchies while holding together the components of the work. Juxtaposing Barre's works with nine others by painters of different generations and viewpoints, from Raoul De Keyser Raoul De Keyser is a Belgian painter, born in 1930, who lives and works in Deinze (Belgium). Since 1964, the Belgian painter Raoul De Keyser has been building a highly personal body of work that is difficult to categorize. to Pascal Pinaud, indicates the parameters offered by this exploration and, as the title of the exhibition states, points toward certain ideas of painting. It is a question of format and presentation and the different relationships (focusing or immersion) they imply, but also of motifs--their repetition and alteration--and especially the use of this space, at once concrete and imaginary, that in the last analysis constitutes painting. Painting is envisaged here in the complexity of its relationship to the wall and in the subversion of its limits: beginnings or ends of lines placed at the edges suggest an unseen surround, just as the saturation of the space opens onto possible overflowings, and the de-centering of forms calls for other configurations. The plane of the canvas is detached from the wall but participates in its frontality and materiality, as exemplified by the effects of texture employed by Peter Halley (Privilege Level, 2000) as well as by the stratifications by means of which Albert Oehlen's Untitled, 1992-2005, turns the support into a surface for the inscription of traces, such as the accidents suggested by Pascal Pinaud (Hennarot BMW BMW in full Bayerische Motoren Werke AG German automaker. Founded as an aircraft engine manufacturer in 1916, the company assumed the name Bayerische Motoren Werke and became known for its high-speed motorcycles in the 1920s. , 2002). All sorts of hatchings, stripes, and grids, in an amused rereading of the modernist emblem, work toward the (de)definition of pictorial space: It is incomplete or discontinuous discontinuous /dis·con·tin·u·ous/ (dis?kon-tin´u-us) 1. interrupted; intermittent; marked by breaks. 2. discrete; separate. 3. lacking logical order or coherence. in Barre's 79-A-100 x 200, 1979, symmetrical through repetition to the point of displacement in Bernard Piffaretti's Sans titre titre titer. (BP 188), 2003, reduced to an intersection in Robert Mangold's Aqua/Green/Orange + Painting, 1983, or freely crumpled crum·ple v. crum·pled, crum·pling, crum·ples v.tr. 1. To crush together or press into wrinkles; rumple. 2. To cause to collapse. v.intr. 1. and tangled by Christian Bonnefoi in Beatus VIII, 2004. These works represent so many approaches to (abstract) painting that, in effect, they demonstrate its infinite variety, so many invitations to focus on and think about looking. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Translated from French by Jeanine Herman. |
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