Carl Ostendarp: Dee/Glasoe. (New York).More than a decade ago, Carl Ostendarp emerged as a deadpan formalist, with bulging foam reliefs and sculptures that read as mockeries--of the monochrome tradition, of Jules Olitski Jules Olitski (March 27 1922 – February 4 2007) was an American abstract painter and sculptor. Early life Olitski was born Jevel Demikovski in Snovsk, in the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic, a few months after his father, a commissar, was , of Expressionism expressionism, term used to describe works of art and literature in which the representation of reality is distorted to communicate an inner vision. The expressionist transforms nature rather than imitates it. . In the mid-'90s, just as he was shifting to a new, cartoony idiom, his career got sidetracked, partly because of a few prominent negative reviews. As his former Yale dassmates and drinking buddies (Sean Landers, John Currin, Richard Phillips, Lisa Yuskavage) became marquee names, Ostendarp virtually dropped out of sight. So this, his first major New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of show in seven years, had the feeling of a reintroduction. Though picking up where the cartoon imagery left off, the six paintings on the walls underscored the idea of a new start. Each presented a big, crisp, kid-friendly icon: a pretzel, eggs, juice drops, a scattering of peanuts and beans, and--the sole inedible motif--a pair of scissors scissors Cutting instrument or tool consisting of a pair of opposed metal blades that meet and cut when the handles at their ends are brought together. Modern scissors are of two types: the more usual pivoted blades have a rivet or screw connection between the cutting ends (all works 2001). They could fairly be described as neo-Pop still lifes, but the style, with its off-pitch palette and slightly pneumatic contours, owes more to Dr. Seuss or Matt Groening than Ed Ruscha or John Wesley. A pair of fried eggs floating (or cooking?) on a hot puce ground might almost have been lifted straight off a page from Green Eggs and Ham. Ostendarp does have two small children, so presumably pre·sum·a·ble adj. That can be presumed or taken for granted; reasonable as a supposition: presumable causes of the disaster. there's an autobiographical element at work here. And yet, despite the memoirist, cheery, pre-K spirit of the new paintings, it wasn't clear that they represented a genuine break. In many ways he is up to his old tricks. The pictures are dauntingly daunt tr.v. daunt·ed, daunt·ing, daunts To abate the courage of; discourage. See Synonyms at dismay. [Middle English daunten, from Old French danter, from Latin lean, stubbornly undernourishing. Their ultraflat surfaces are the tactile equivalent of gouache gouache (gwäsh): see watercolor painting. gouache Opaque watercolour. Also known as poster paint, designer's colour, and body colour, it differs from transparent watercolour in that the pigments are bound by liquid glue, which is or silkscreen. Their iconography opens up slowly, if at all (Iconfess I don't understand the scissors painting). For both better and worse, Ostendarp remains a serenely uningratiating, Barnett Newman--like artist. One of the finest paintings here, Juicy Juice, might even be a Newman homage: a trickle of four crimson drops forming a sort of vertical "zip" down the center of the horizontal canvas. This is exactly the sort of sly, winking art reference that Ostendarp's critics were objecting to years ago. And it points up the way he, like his friend Currin, is a consummate insider artist. At a time when so many painters are trying to stake a claim to "outsider" status, Currin's and Ostendarp's work does exactly the opposite--it flaunts its art-historical knowingness. Ostendarp's aesthetic is probably more extreme, more mandarin even than Currin's. He's a nuance maven, a humorist hu·mor·ist n. 1. A person with a good sense of humor. 2. A performer or writer of humorous material. humorist Noun a person who speaks or writes in a humorous way who leaves his jokes unspoken. In the peanut and bean images, for instance, one has to ignore a lurking bad pun (they're "field paintings," get it?) to savor the pictures' austere, Zen garden-like, artfully tweaked shape arrangements. Those arrangements, with their insinuated, slow-release pleasures, can be strangely satisfying. At the same time, though, one can't help but feel that something is missing. Currin seems to keep two impulses in play: an ironic, editorial temperament and a libidinous li·bid·i·nous adj. Having or exhibiting lustful desires; lascivious. facility. In Ostendarp, the critical intelligence is unchecked, without any raw pictorial appetite to rub up To burnish; to polish; to clean To excite; to awaken; to rouse to action; as, to rub up the memory s>. See also: Rub Rub against. It would be a mistake to underestimate his achievement: Compared to fellow Pop Minimalists like Takashi Murakami and Gary Hume, Ostendarp is both wilier and less coy. Still, one looks for his art to warm and complicate itself somehow, to grow more impulsive, to show a hint of recklessness. In that respect, the comic, childlike ambience of this show seemed promising. But it's too early to tell if it represents another Ostendarpian tactical gambit, or the stirrings of real change. |
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