Benjamin Butler: Karyn Lovegrove Gallery.In his first solo exhibition at Karyn Lovegrove Gallery, painter Benjamin Butler exploited to the hilt the sometimes surprising range of color found in nature. With the exception of Field of Flowers (all works 2005), every painting here depicts trees, and Butler's unapologetically single-minded focus signals a relationship to his subject that is both personal and profound. At first glance, Butler's simplistic forms and restricted subject matter might suggest a lack of substance, but a little more time spent with his paintings reveals a deeper complexity. There are nods, for example, to Impressionism impressionism, in musicimpressionism, in music, a French movement in the late 19th and early 20th cent. It was begun by Debussy in reaction to the dramatic and dynamic emotionalism of romantic music, especially that of Wagner. Reflecting the impressionist schools of French painting and letters, Debussy developed a style in which atmosphere and mood take the place of strong emotion or of the story in program music., Color Field painting, and psychedelia. The disparate influences of Gustav Klimt, Milton Avery, and Frank Stella are also apparent. And though his palette is strikingly different from theirs, Butler shares Maureen Gallace's steadfast pursuit of a single subject and the sunny flatness of Alex Katz.[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] What makes Butler's work so impressive is the range of styles and approaches that he employs, and the ways in which his representations of the external world are enhanced through a Waldenesque internalization Internalization A decision by a brokerage to fill an order with the firm's own inventory of stock.Notes: When a brokerage receives an order they have numerous choices as to how it should be filled. They can send it to an exchange, an ECN, market maker, a regional exchange or fill it by using the firm's own inventory of stock.Firms often internalize orders when they can because they profit from the spread. of nature. In Five Trees, Twelve Leaves (Purple), the artist surrounds skeletal trees with deep purple and light blue outlines and fills the background with dizzying stripes. In Untitled Tree (Blue, Violet, Green), simple shapes and large blocks of color take priority over convoluted pattern. Thus each work uses different means to encourage the same meditative way of looking. In 18 Trees in an Autumn Forest, Butler combines Klimt-like dots and squares of foliage with stark brown trunks that chop up the picture plane, while the ground is made up of an expanse of swirls that give it the appearance of a geological map gone awry. Blue-Green Forest is equally effective, its woozy green lawn and pale birchlike trees seeming to drift in and out of focus against the aqua sky as though seen through a heat haze. In Three Trees (Blue, Violet, Pink, Green), Easter-egg pastels mark out a zigzag road or river while the trees and sky are built from large areas of blue and gray that suggest a stained-glass window. Lying face up on a plinth in the center of the gallery, Field of Flowers #3 grounds the show figuratively and literally. An expanse of bright green dotted with pink, yellow, and orange, it represents a meadow seen from above. The fluorescent intensity of the color feels artificial at first, but it isn't so different from that found on, say, Death Valley hillsides in the spring. The contrast provided by the gallery's white floor brought these colors vividly to life, and the well-designed hang allowed each painting to breathe while still participating in a dialogue with its neighbors. The enchantment of Butler's project, then, derives from his mastery of color combined with the set of painterly techniques that he has carefully compiled and that he uses to convey a heartfelt feeling of kinship with the forest. His trees seem to possess a mystic Tolkienian wisdom, and the openness with which this idea is presented allows the work to remain fresh--even uplifting. |
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