Charline Von Heyl: Friedrich Petzel Gallery.It's been roughly ten years since Charline yon Heyl started showing her abstract paintings--first in Germany in the early '90s and by mid-decade in 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 . Even though her oil and mixed-media works on canvas have developed considerably, they retain their tentativeness and, overall, their unevenness. Doubt, it would seem, is an ever-present condition in her art. Is this a virtue, or does it diminish the work? How is the credibility of the better work affected by those paintings that ask how much "ugly" they can take and still remain viable? This exhibition, von Heyl's best to date, offers no resolution to the questions her paintings seem intentionally to provoke. Here von Heyl presented ten paintings, each measuring seventy-eight by eighty-two inches or vice versa--big enough to push doubt to the fore. Squarely situated in the anti-aesthetic tradition, they come with the "bad painting" pedigree that found such favor in Germany in the '80s, chiefly through the work of Martin Kippenberger and Albert Oehlen. It should be noted that women painters weren't exactly welcomed into those ranks with open arms. One wonders if the paintings' effeminate ef·fem·i·nate adj. 1. Having qualities or characteristics more often associated with women than men. See Synonyms at female. 2. Characterized by weakness and excessive refinement. stains and smears, hesitancy hes·i·tan·cy n. An involuntary delay or inability in starting the urinary stream. , stops and starts, lack of bravura bra·vu·ra n. 1. Music a. Brilliant technique or style in performance. b. A piece or passage that emphasizes a performer's virtuosity. 2. A showy manner or display. adj. 1. and decisiveness aren't a methodology of resistance, and an artful one at that. In several of the new paintings, the appearance of mess and mistakes prevails. Von Heyl gets up the left half of Untitled (Orange) (all works 2003) with a variety of washes, doodles Doodles can mean the following:
One can appreciate how this embedded theatricality could be taken for a sign of honesty and sincerity. (If that's actually the case, yon Hefts downright confessional!) And yet, as if to ward off that misconception in advance, she varies her paintings within any one exhibition (including this one) so often as to render her "style" suspect. There were too many paintings here; but while the overinstallation did draw attention to the misdemeanor of flashing too much stylistic variance and influence, it also added a subtle layer of retinal confusion. In I Am Monkeys, one of two canvases worked in tones of orange and rusty brown, von Heyl scrubs dry brown paint lightly over the surface, then rubs the canvas clean with thinner, creating buoyant forms that seem to percolate percolate /per·co·late/ (per´kah-lat) 1. to strain; to submit to percolation. 2. to trickle slowly through a substance. 3. a liquid that has been submitted to percolation. up from the lower depths. In Floor 5 #11, preliminary scouring scouring characterized by scour. scouring disease a colloquial name for secondary nutritional copper deficiency. gestures are overlaid and entangled en·tan·gle tr.v. en·tan·gled, en·tan·gling, en·tan·gles 1. To twist together or entwine into a confusing mass; snarl. 2. To complicate; confuse. 3. To involve in or as if in a tangle. with transparent, washed-out, Rustoleum-colored forms that look as if they were apprehended just shy of achieving figural fig·ur·al adj. Of, consisting of, or forming a pictorial composition of human or animal figures. fig ur·al·ly adv.Adj. definition. In these and many other pairs, we see theme and variation, but perhaps we see also (perhaps too much) von Heyl's desire to explain. Maybe that's why, in addition to the paintings, she showed for the first time a series of mixed-media works on paper. In their marks, cuts, tears, and seams we recognize the gestures that animate her paintings; yet the drawings are engorged en·gorge v. en·gorged, en·gorg·ing, en·gorg·es v.tr. 1. To devour greedily. 2. To gorge; glut. 3. To fill to excess, as with blood or other fluid. v.intr. with buffed heads and body parts, animal and landscape motifs, travel and decor imagery--all evidence of how much yon Heyl starts with and how little is left by the time she turns to paint. |
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