ALICIA BEACH.SUSANNE VIELMETTER How do you get a gestural abstract painting to yield clean, precise hard edges? Just slice it up. That might sound glib, but it describes the simple logic at work in Alicia Beach's recent projects. Actually, rather than cut finished works into pieces, Beach paints on long, deep slats of birch plywood that are hung vertically with spaces between. While the stripes she brushes freehand See Macromedia FreeHand. along the faces of the slats are loose, she exploits one of the axioms of gestural painting--that fluid brushwork brush·work n. 1. Work done with a brush. 2. The manner in which a painter applies paint with a brush. brushwork Noun eventually hits the straight edge of the panel or canvas. Each work consists of a combination of the hard edges of the slats and stripes of intervening wall and a painterly paint·er·ly adj. 1. Of, relating to, or characteristic of a painter; artistic. 2. a. Having qualities unique to the art of painting. b. surface, generating a strangely cohesive whole from the repetition of breaks and discontinuities in color, surface, and space, with the wall becoming as important as the slats. She often paints the sides of the slats as well, which cast hazy hued hued adj. Having a given hue, aspect, or character. Often used in combination: rosy-hued; dark-hued. shadows on the abutting white wall; where two sides of different colors face, the reflection gradates between the hues in much the same way as the soft stripes merge on the slats' fronts. Where the sides are left unpainted, they throw only a scant color reflection, which amplifies the sharp distinct ion between slat and backdrop; rather than contribute to the overall effect, the stripes of uninflected wall--stark white to shadowed gray, depending on the lighting--serve as sudden interruptions. Beach complicates this formula by varying the width and depth of the slats, separating them by inconsistent intervals of space, and curving some of their surfaces, further obscuring the categories of front and side, center and periphery. Happily, she avoids Op-like games, say, of an image that breaks up into incoherence incoherence Not understandable; disordered; without logical connection. See Schizophrenia. and then becomes another entirely as the viewer walks around it. Instead, Beach's works are uninterruptedly changing before your eyes, always retaining the most part of what you saw before you took your last step. Careful choices of medium round out her arsenal of well-judged maneuvers: Jarring contrasts of color--pastels pitted against intense hues, warm tones suddenly immersed in cool--periodically interrupt expansive harmonies, and balanced compositions suddenly become unbalanced as you move around them. Meanwhile, shifts in paint quality, from matte to glossy to iridescent ir·i·des·cent adj. 1. Producing a display of lustrous, rainbowlike colors: an iridescent oil slick; iridescent plumage. 2. to metallic, alternately blur and emphasize the boundaries between physical form, applied pigment, and reflected ligh t. Ultimately, dulling and sharpening, cutting and fading, seem to be core aspects of both the construction and the fluctuating appearance of Beach's works. Among alternately cryptic and straightforward titles like 4/17/00 (my piano) and Wood #1 (all works 2000) one stands our as representative of the whole group: California. I can't help but think of Beach's art in relation to the Light and Space and finish-fetish preoccupations so connected to the region, but her works are hardly derivative; they seem carefully and independently conceived, inspired by these influences and a range of others, from Abstract Expressionism abstract expressionism, movement of abstract painting that emerged in New York City during the mid-1940s and attained singular prominence in American art in the following decade; also called action painting and the New York school. , post-painterly abstraction, and Hard Edge to Op, Minimalism minimalism, schools of contemporary art and music, with their origins in the 1960s, that have emphasized simplicity and objectivity. Minimalism in the Visual Arts , and even a bit of Pattern and Decoration. Who would have thought you could find all those elements together in one room (let alone in one work), that they could come together so seamlessly, without pastiche pastiche (păstēsh`, pä–), work of art that combines themes and styles from various sources in such a way as to appear obviously derivative. or a trace of irony, and that the result could be so engaging and fresh? Beach has been a sleeper in a pack of Los Angeles painters who are revisiting these influences, but I have a feeling she just might outdistance out·dis·tance tr.v. out·dis·tanced, out·dis·tanc·ing, out·dis·tanc·es 1. To outrun, especially in a long-distance race. 2. most of them. |
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