Andreas Schon.Andreas Schon's pantings are constructed from a lattice of straight lines and arcs that form a matrix of intersecting planes. From this abstract arrangement of the two-dimensional canvas, Schon develops a series of landscapes and a series of paintings of drawn window blinds. In the landscape paintings, based on the plans of actual ancient Aegean sites and on fictional constructs, the transversing lines represent the roadways, furrowed fur·row n. 1. A long, narrow, shallow trench made in the ground by a plow. 2. A rut, groove, or narrow depression: snow drifting in furrows. 3. ground, and architectural foundations of ancient lands. Olynth I, 1992, depicts the eroded Hippodamian grid used to plan the Greek town of Olynthus in the 5th century B.C. The compositions for Eryma II, 1991, Tholos tho·los n. pl. tho·loi A beehive-shaped stone tomb of Mycenaean Greece, roofed by corbeling and usually built into the side of a hill. [Greek, round building with a conical roof.] I and Tholos II, both 1992, are fictive fic·tive adj. 1. Of, relating to, or able to engage in imaginative invention. 2. Of, relating to, or being fiction; fictional. 3. Not genuine; sham. hybrids based on actual archaeological sites, fusing such elements as a circular, ancient public-burial monument with the contours of foundation walls. These paintings record the beginnings of modern Western civilization Noun 1. Western civilization - the modern culture of western Europe and North America; "when Ghandi was asked what he thought of Western civilization he said he thought it would be a good idea" Western culture . With their grids of intersecting lines overlaying the earth like a carpet of Carl Andre's tiles, these works remind us that there is no longer an unadulterated un·a·dul·ter·at·ed adj. 1. Not mingled or diluted with extraneous matter; pure. See Synonyms at pure. 2. Out-and-out; utter: the unadulterated truth. landscape and also very little virgin territory left to painting. Schon's landscapes are rendered in a diverse range of 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. styles: some in large brushy strokes that replicate the bleeding effects of a watercolor on a magnified scale, others, truer to their photographic sources, produce the illusionistic effects of modulated mod·u·late v. mod·u·lat·ed, mod·u·lat·ing, mod·u·lates v.tr. 1. To adjust or adapt to a certain proportion; regulate or temper. 2. forms and create a logically receding space. Schon selects his catalogue of images from photographs, books, newspapers, and magazines which function as a pictorial travelogue. As we recede re·cede 1 intr.v. re·ced·ed, re·ced·ing, re·cedes 1. To move back or away from a limit, point, or mark: waited for the floodwaters to recede. 2. into the deep perspectival space of the painting, we travel back in time. Like Sherrie Levine's re-presentations of masterworks from picture-book reproductions, the experiences that Schon captures have traveled through the mediated channels of our consumer society. Schon's landscapes, however, are not estheticizations of picturesque ruins but emblems of the origins of civilization, underscoring the foggy fog·gy adj. fog·gi·er, fog·gi·est 1. a. Full of or surrounded by fog. b. Resembling or suggestive of fog. 2. distance time imposes on our view of history. Paintings like Olynth I are more than just a transcription of an archaeological monument: they are determined by contemporary interpretive modes that ultimately reflect our own subjective experience. The complexity of dealing with historical themes in a contemporary context is more poetically confronted in the series, "Blind," 1992. In these paintings, Schon demonstrates the historical discontinuity that occurs when blending past and present in a single experiential moment. As we look into these closed windows, which mimic the pattern of drawn venetian blinds, our gaze does not penetrate the surface but is caught in the viscous web of opaque paint. We are voyeurs, yet there is no one to look at, only a mute surface representing night or day. We find ourselves self-consciously looking into a barrier that demarcates the temporal void between the present moment of our experience and our separation and alienation from the past. |
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