Bill Jensen.MARY BOONE GALLERY With his relatively diminutive landscape abstractions, Bill Jensen protracts what might be described as a neo-easel tradition. His works recently found a home in a space originally designed for the pomp and circumstance proper to the '80s redux Refers to being brought back, revived or restored. From the Latin "reducere." of heroic-scale painting. This was an admittedly strange and awkward fit that even the gallery seemed to be self-conscious about. The space was subtly repainted in off-white, perhaps in order to afford a more compatible ambience, a "designer" atmosphere for intimate esthetic encounters undoubtedly meant to make the presence of Jensen's intensely and insistently sober painting seem less incongruous with this monumental architectural context. This unavoidable mismatch worked to make the paintings seem all the more pathetic, helpless, if not insignificant. Simply put, they could not hold the space. It's hard to imagine that Jensen produced these works with this unforgiving space in mind, and if he did, then it might have been with the taci purpose of ignoring it for subversive ends. But ignoring a space--or refusing t acknowledge its special features--won't make it disappear. For a brief moment in the early '80s, Jensen's language of swirling, quasi-abstract, symbolic forms held a certain amount of charm for me, and even though I could not bring myself to buy into the artist's apparent commitment to reviving a sort of mystical expressionism, I nevertheless did find the paintings' tautly rendered structures and implosive im·plo·sive n. A stop consonant pronounced with the breath drawn in. im·plo sive adj. dynamics rather pleasing. Jensen had an ability to do provocative things with the tricky and tense relationship between the "internalized" conditions of form/shape and qualifies of scale. But that was a brief and shining moment, and since then Jensen has seemingly lost whatever edge he might have had; now, the work appears to be stuck in the mire mire (mer) [Fr.] one of the figures on the arm of an ophthalmometer whose images are reflected on the cornea; measurement of their variations determines the amount of corneal astigmatism. mire n. of tautology tautology In logic, a statement that cannot be denied without inconsistency. Thus, “All bachelors are either male or not male” is held to assert, with regard to anything whatsoever that is a bachelor, that it is male or it is not male. . There is an almost cantankerous can·tan·ker·ous adj. 1. Ill-tempered and quarrelsome; disagreeable: disliked her cantankerous landlord. 2. quality to these recent abstracted landscape works. Uninviting in their drabness, they look as if the Ashcan school had gone abstract-pastoral. Produced over the past four years, the works, ranging in siz from 29-by-24 inches to 36-by-44 inches, offer a color sensibility that might b described as "sullied pretty." It would not be inappropriate to speak of a kind of mannered, squalid beauty here, but I'm not sure if it's an achievement or a failure. Surfaces are worked and reworked to such a degree that the signs of formal procedure in certain areas become ossified os·si·fy v. os·si·fied, os·si·fy·ing, os·si·fies v.intr. 1. To change into bone; become bony. 2. as an unpleasant impasto impasto (ĭmpăs`tō, –pä`stō), thickly applied paint that projects from the picture surface. Such works as Childe Hassam's Allies Day (1917; National Gall. of Art, Washington, D.C. crust. Undoubtedly, there will be some who can find something eloquent to say about Jensen's "brooding" sensibility, and who will claim to have located a new kind of beauty here, but there is little that could redeem these works from their state of enervation enervation /en·er·va·tion/ (en?er-va´shun) 1. lack of nervous energy. 2. neurectomy. enervation 1. lack of nervous energy. 2. removal of a nerve or a section of a nerve. . I would be happier to drag Milton Avery out of storage. |
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sive adj.
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