Alphonse Borysewicz.YOSHII GALLERY Maybe it's the hovering rash of dark spots on the quartet he calls Hunting the Queen, or the image of a chalky, primitive hive at the bottom tier of For an Unknown Church, or the migrating scatter of drably pigmented, insectlike marks swirling around Black Mulch/Swarm, but Alphonse Borysewicz's recent abstractions (all works 1993) produce a sweetly, transcendental buzz. Borysewicz does have a history of devotional de·vo·tion·al adj. Of, relating to, expressive of, or used in devotion, especially of a religious nature. n. A short religious service. de·vo art-making. He gave up seminary studies some years ago to find sanctuary in abstraction, occasionally delving into overtly religious constructions, later spending time "Spending Time" is the first single released by Christian artist Stellar Kart. The lyrics describe the band members desire to spend "more time with God". "Sometimes it’s a real struggle to spend time with God. in Japan before returning to his studio in Brooklyn. On the evidence here, I'd say this conversion marks him as an irreverent soul who may be engaged in a dialogue with God but shakes hands with a pie-throwing little devil. His canvases magnify mag·ni·fy v. To increase the apparent size of, especially with a lens. minute portions of a pastoral universe at which he's hurled daubs of paint the color of cow dung Noun 1. cow dung - a piece of dried bovine dung buffalo chip, cow chip, chip droppings, dung, muck - fecal matter of animals . This subversive muddying of rather elegant, if conventionally layered and diffuse, pictorial surfaces gives the work's spiritual dimension a refreshingly down-to-earth, graffiti-like quality. Ghostly, energetic forms are set against pitted and scarred fields of oil and wax, and anchored by broken horizontal grid lines resembling poles of bamboo. The surfaces often resemble translucent cave walls overlaid with earthy swipes of a palette knife and casual strokes of a brush. One doesn't look at them so much as peer into them. The rippling pale-blue and browned-wheat surface of Black Mulch/Storm suggests a pool into which a curtain of dark caligraphic marks fall like driving rain. It is related to Japanese textile patterns--very pretty and detached--but verges on the precious, unlike Black Mulch/Yellow Field which hung next to it. Here, a parchment-colored grid, weathered gray with age, is given a few peatlike swabs attached vertically to one side like moss to an old stone fence. In Family Tree, a collection of rough turquoise rounds with pale yellow "halos" dance across a stormy gray horizon like bubbles blown in the wind. In the austere and rather witty River Rouge River Rouge (r zh), city (1990 pop. 11,314), Wayne co., SE Mich., an industrial suburb of Detroit, on the Detroit and Rouge rivers; settled c.1817, inc. 1899. and Grace, a primitive chalicelike form hangs from an unevenly woven ochre grid, surrounded and crossed by wonderful little mudballs. This figure is echoed in Black Mulch/Swarm, in which Borysewicz's signature, dark splotches outline a crudely made hourglass hourglass, glass instrument for measuring time, usually consisting of two bulbs united by a narrow neck. One bulb is filled with fine sand that runs through the neck into the other bulb in an hour's time. or lantern that extends to and falls over the edges of the painting. In Hunting the Queen II, a single dark teardrop tear·dropn. 1. A single tear. 2. An object shaped like a tear. , suspended at the top of the matted ivory plane, hangs in the air like an ethereal ethereal /ethe·re·al/ (e-ther´e-il) 1. pertaining to, prepared with, containing, or resembling ether. 2. evanescent; delicate. e·the·re·al adj. 1. third eye. Number IV in this series has more sexual connotations: a portion of a stippled stippled /stip·pled/ (stip´'ld) marked by small spots or flecks. stippled covered with many small dots. stippled cells see basophilic stippling. yellow oblong breaks through the top of the picture, its dark "nose" pointing to the bottom edge with effluent potential. As a whole, these works are full of the light of optimism and they do suggest the beautiful, solitary landscapes of a born naturalist, but, finally, Borysewicz seems mainly concerned, to borrow a phrase from Wallace Stevens, with confronting "the difficulty of the visible." Linda Yablonsky |
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