Agnes Martin.From the early '60s to the late '80s, the grid in Agnes Martin's work shifts from relative differentiation to relative undifferentiation--to an increasing sense of entropy entropy (ĕn`trəpē), quantity specifying the amount of disorder or randomness in a system bearing energy or information. Originally defined in thermodynamics in terms of heat and temperature, entropy indicates the degree to which a given . Her early grids are constituted by small, obviously handmade marks--confirming the "naturalness" signalled by such titles as Gray Stone II, 1961 and Milk River, 1963--that seem to undermine the axiomative uniformity of the grid, however unassailable it remains. In contrast, the surfaces of the later, untitled grids seem almost inhumanly slick, as though made by a robotic hand. One wonders if the abstract sublime has not turned into tedium vitae. The grid has all the simplicity and dullness of eternity, but Martin initially tried to make it timely, "touching," and subliminally complicated through texture. She "rearranged" it as much as seemed possible without disintegrating it, experimentally narrowing or broadening the space between the lines Between the lines can refer to:
In the later works, the width between the lines, while not completely stabilized, tends to be broad, as though signalling that she has at last found the fight proportion--the one that conveys a sense of well-being. But the tactile quality of the work diminishes, however much the surface of certain works, like that of Untitled #6, 1985, has a facilely brushed, sweeping look--somewhat less agitated ag·i·tate v. ag·i·tat·ed, ag·i·tat·ing, ag·i·tates v.tr. 1. To cause to move with violence or sudden force. 2. and nuanced than that of earlier surfaces. Martin seems to finally accept the picture plane: she no longer tries to get under its (and our) skin, to needle her way into the surface as though inscribing the grid onto it, like a tattoo. The mood seems to have changed from insidiously manic to depressive de·pres·sive adj. 1. Tending to depress or lower. 2. Depressing; gloomy. 3. Of or relating to psychological depression. n. A person suffering from psychological depression. grandiosity, not unlike the difference between summer and winter on the plains of Saskatchewan where she was born. Martin's work suggests that the grid is an intellectual defense against instinct (nature), an instinct that early in her career threatened to disrupt it. Later, instinct was brought under control, lending the grid a drier, exhausted look, however lightly libidinous li·bid·i·nous adj. Having or exhibiting lustful desires; lascivious. her colors--even when they turned to preashen gray--remained. Then the grid's meaning as repression, indeed denial, became self-evident. Behind all the supposed spirituality and mysticism that have been attributed to Martin's Formalist for·mal·ism n. 1. Rigorous or excessive adherence to recognized forms, as in religion or art. 2. An instance of rigorous or excessive adherence to recognized forms. 3. paintings, the development of her increasingly hermetic hermetic /her·met·ic/ (her-met´ik) impervious to air. her·met·ic or her·met·i·cal adj. Completely sealed, especially against the escape or entry of air. , ultimately monodic mon·o·dy n. pl. mon·o·dies 1. An ode for one voice or actor, as in Greek drama. 2. A poem in which the poet or speaker mourns another's death. 3. Music a. works shows her working through a death wish but unwittingly submitting to it. In the end the desert of the grid unmistakably discloses the sense of desertion that her withdrawn art and life acted out all along. |
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