ANOKA FARUQEE.ZOLLA/LIEBERMAN GALLERY INC inc - /ink/ increment, i.e. increase by one. Especially used by assembly programmers, as many assembly languages have an "inc" mnemonic. Antonym: dec. . As this recent show demonstrates, painting can still serve as color's laboratory, with pattern one of its most powerful investigative tools. Anoka Faruqee breaks down painstakingly observed hues according to specificity and difference and combines the captured colors in sequences rich with optical intrigue. Take, for example, Banana Painting, 1999. It originates with something reminiscent of an exercise from Painting 101: Faruqee observed a banana over time, transcribing its tone each day as accurately as possible. The resulting color studies, out of sequence, became source material for a painting, a field of very narrow vertical stripes. Her interest was not to chronicle the temporal journey of a banana from green to black; instead, she used her recovery of seemingly infinite shades of chartreuse chartreuse (shärtr z`), liqueur made exclusively by Carthusians at their monastery, La Grande Chartreuse, France, until their expulsion in 1903. and gold to create a compelling abstract image that is still somehow inexorably rooted in the seen. For Faruqee, color is an alphabet, a set of characters to be processed as she desires--yet it still retains a genet genet: see civet. ic link to its organic source. Highly inventive pattern painting provides Faruqee with an arena for infinite calibration and permutation One possible combination of items out of a larger set of items. For example, with the set of numbers 1, 2 and 3, there are six possible permutations: 12, 21, 13, 31, 23 and 32. (mathematics) permutation - 1. . She often employs smallish snowflake- or asterisk-shaped marks that fit fairly snugly with each other, laboriously but systematically weaving a kind of painted carpet out of thousands of uniform elements differentiated only by shade. Faruqee's work recalls other efforts that atomize color, from endlessly complex Islamic tiling to the chromatic pixelation This article is about the graphics artifact. For the stop motion animation technique, see pixilation. For the censorship method, see pixelization. In computer graphics, pixelation of computer technology. All this introduces a new kind of neo-pointillism to the ambiguous relations of color to itself as well as form and substance, a remapping of the world into what seems an infinity of discrete tonal impulses. Faruqee assembles her little six-pronged pixels into dreamy images, often pillowy and vaguely atmospheric, detailed right down to each minute flange flange (flanj) a projecting border or edge; in dentistry, that part of the denture base which extends from around the embedded teeth to the border of the denture. flange n. 1. but subsumed within the larger pictorial flow. Sometimes she presents these in groups of two or three, as twins or triplets, with subtle, almost imperceptible differences between them. Sometimes she will change the color of just one asterisk out of many, maybe shifting a pink in one panel to a rose in the other, as in the two-canvas Pink Gerber Daisy Paintings (Twins), 1999. Composed of a narrower range of grays, Inverse Twins, 2000, presents a more obvious difference: One panel is the "reverse" of the other, with dark asterisks where its partner had light, and vice versa VICE VERSA. On the contrary; on opposite sides. . And in several two-canvas works, such as Evil Twin, 2000, Faruqee presents precisely the same image at different scales, questioning what "larger" and "smaller" mean when they describe identical visual experiences. (And can they be called "identical" when the scale is clearly shifted? Is there a hierarchy of difference, with scale falling somewhere below tone?) These projects become tests, exercises in fastidious fas·tid·i·ous adj. 1. Possessing or displaying careful, meticulous attention to detail. 2. Difficult to please; exacting. 3. Having complex nutritional requirements. Used of microorganisms. procedures that somehow constantly shift their parameters, creating mesmerizing mes·mer·ize tr.v. mes·mer·ized, mes·mer·iz·ing, mes·mer·iz·es 1. To spellbind; enthrall: "He could mesmerize an audience by the sheer force of his presence" paintings that unmask the illusion of stability and introduce equal amounts of doubt and pleasure into the always complex act ivity of looking. |
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