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"The risk of existence.".


For an artist, orchestrating a salon around your own most recent work is a traditional act of hubris that dates to the eighteenth century. It's also contemporary practice, a way to indulge the fantasy of imposing order on the world, charting your own ancestry of deceased influences, associating yourself with jeunesse doree art stars, and colonizing the efforts of steadfast under-knowns. Such a show always entails diplomacy and self-aggrandizement, involving returned favors, deep pockets, deeper flights of fancy, and an ability to wrestle with your own demons. Such a show also solves the problem of what to exhibit if, like Mark Greenwold, the curator of "The Risk of Existence," you make only one painting a year.

This particular auto-curatorial act was an especially brilliant instance of anxious self-contextualization, in that the show (eighteen works by as many artists) got the visual and iconographic weights and balances just right. Small to midsize paintings, prints, and drawings were intermixed with rare discernment. Delicate filaments, mostly visual, some literary, linked disparate works in which high-keyed color, graphic precisionism Precisionism

Smooth, precise technique used primarily in the 1920s by several U.S. painters in representational canvases depicting sharply defined forms, such as urban skylines; the industrial landscape of factories and smokestacks, buildings, and machinery; and country
, and over-the-top subject matter predominated.

Immortalized by Chuck Close (a key figure in the family romance that unfolds here) twenty years ago as a youthful bucktoothed geekster wearing aviator glasses and a virtuosically painted plaid shirt, Greenwold lives in Albany, New York For other uses, see Albany.
Albany is the capital of the State of New York and the county seat of Albany County. Albany lies 136 miles (219 km) north of New York City, and slightly to the south of the juncture of the Mohawk and Hudson Rivers.
. Indeed, his latter-day Magic Realist paintings have an upstate grit that I associate with William Kennedy's novels, based in the same Hudson River city. For anyone meditating on family values, Greenwold's new painting, The Risk of Existence (for Anya), 1997-98, all of 14 inches square, is bound to inspire a chill of recognition and horror: Ivan Albright meets Charles Addams. There, arrayed before a blazing colonial-style hearth, is a lineup of ghoulish ghoul  
n.
1. One who delights in the revolting, morbid, or loathsome.

2. A grave robber.

3. An evil spirit or demon in Muslim folklore believed to plunder graves and feed on corpses.
 family types - among them, a mewling little girl spread-eagled in a kilt on a Chippendale chair; a young drag queen proffering a tiny spectral ballerina in his palm; the wizened, balding person of the artist propping up a rigid elder in a plaid bathrobe (this appears to be Greenwold's father, either dying or newly risen from the dead, for above him flies a human skull with wings); and a butch-coiffed mother type, grinning as she strangles strangles

an acute disease of horses caused by infection with Streptococcus equi subsp. equi, and characterized by fever, purulent rhinitis, pharyngitis, laryngitis, abscessation of the draining lymph nodes and cough.
 herself. On the table in front lurks a long, sharp knife pointed at the figures. Who wouldn't go in for murder, suicide, or delicate self-cutting, given such a filial crew?

The obsessive verisimilitude of Greenwold's painting, with its pinpricked rendering of details like the china in the hutch and the candlestick reflected in the mirror, is obviously neo-Eyckian. Elsewhere in the show, a similar attention to polished surfaces and niggling details was visible in the work of Jim Nutt and in a small abstraction by James Siena (hanging next to a John Wesley interior) that features reedy painted lines scrawled into a boxy labyrinthine pattern. The Siena is a runic (jargon) runic - Obscure, consisting of runes.

VMS fans sometimes refer to Unix as "RUnix". Unix fans return the compliment by expanding VMS to "Very Messy Syntax" or "Vachement Mauvais Systeme" (French; literally "Cowlike Bad System", idiomatically "Bitchy Bad System").
 blank field, the Nutt a grotesque imaginary portrait, yet they float together in Greenwold's mind's eye.

Two keys to Greenwold's work are a lapidary lap·i·dar·y  
n. pl. lap·i·dar·ies
1. One who cuts, polishes, or engraves gems.

2. A dealer in precious or semiprecious stones.

adj.
1.
 intimism and a close familiarity with the grid. Here, a corner grouping offered different depictions of pebbles: Vija Celmins's gridded Desert Surface #2, 1992, hanging next to Catherine Murphy's portrait of her husband, sculptor Harry Roseman, lying face down in rocks. Nearby, a small Myron Stout abstraction with bright bands of pink, purple, and yellow suggested a very intense cloisonne coat of many colors coat of many colors

Jacob’s gift to Joseph; object of jealousy. [O.T.: Genesis 37:3]

See : Jealousy
, as did a larger, diamond-gridded Chuck Close painting of William Wegman with similarly bright hues.

Neo-mannerist figuration reared its ugly head throughout the show, suggesting all sorts of rappel a l'ordre agendas, at once repressive and liberating. A small John Currin oil of big-breasted women sitting in the grass carried roughly the same exquisite weight as Paul Cadmus's The Lid, 1990, a work in egg tempera depicting souls adrift in a coffin-shaped bark. A Balthus study for his "Wuthering Heights" illustrations (a Highlands allusion, like the plaids?) looked as charmingly recherche as the small, slightly kitsch Lucian Freud pastel, after the School of Fontainebleau The Ecole de Fontainebleau refers to two periods of artistic production in France during the late Renaissance centered around the royal Château of Fontainebleau.

First School of Fontainebleau (from 1531)
, of one girl tweaking another's teat teat (tet) nipple (1).

teat
n.
1. See nipple.

2. The female breast; mamma.

3. A papilla.
.

The quasi-religious martyrdom of the modern artist, who has all too often been dismissed as a madman or a quack, was underlined in the choice of works by Blake (three illustrations for The Book of Job), Francis Bacon (neatly enough, a depiction of Blake's death mask), Henry Darger (a massacre scene involving little girls), and Odd Nerdrum (a weird homoerotic recasting of the Dance of Salome). Sifting through all this evidence, you could argue that Greenwold, like Blake, sees himself as the afflicted Job. Perhaps like the bare-buttocked vestal in Lisa Yuskavage's nearby Submit, Greenwold's figure of the cross-dresser (in fact, his fourteen-year-old nephew) is a case of sublimated sub·li·mate  
v. sub·li·mat·ed, sub·li·mat·ing, sub·li·mates

v.tr.
1. Chemistry To cause (a solid or gas) to change state without becoming a liquid.

2.
a.
 exhibitionism exhibitionism /ex·hi·bi·tion·ism/ (ek?si-bish´in-izm) a paraphilia marked by recurrent sexual urges for and fantasies of exposing one's genitals to an unsuspecting stranger.

ex·hi·bi·tion·ism
n.
. All this self-revelation by means of indirection Not direct. Indirection provides a way of accessing instructions, routines and objects when their physical location is constantly changing. The initial routine points to some place, and, using hardware and/or software, that place points to some other place.  amplifies the strangeness of Greenwold's own painting, lending it a historical weight, substantiating its sadomasochistic sa·do·mas·o·chism  
n.
The combination of sadism and masochism, in particular the deriving of pleasure, especially sexual gratification, from inflicting or submitting to physical or emotional abuse.
 fantasies, and vindicating its obsessive sense of craft.

Brooks Adams is a writer who lives in New York.
COPYRIGHT 1999 Artforum International Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1999, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:paintings, various artists, Phyllis Kind Gallery, New York, New York
Author:Brooks, Adams
Publication:Artforum International
Date:Feb 1, 1999
Words:823
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