DAVID DEUTSCH.GORNEY BRAVIN + LEE David Deutsch David Deutsch (born 1953 in Haifa, Israel) is a physicist at the University of Oxford. He is a non-stipendiary Visiting Professor in the Department of Atomic and Laser Physics at the Centre for Quantum Computation, Clarendon Laboratory. made his mark in the early '80s as a painter of contemporary pastorals. In these delicately rendered arcadias, he included objects like radio towers and satellite dishes--signs of modern telecommunications that served as subtle reminders of our post-Edenic state. About a decade later, he began to base his landscapes on photographs taken from airplanes. The addition of aerial perspective aerial perspective Method of producing a sense of depth in a painting by imitating the effect of atmosphere that makes objects look paler, bluer, and hazier or less distinct in the middle and far distance. introduced a new level of complexity into Deutsch's nature/culture debate: The intrusion of technology was no longer just the subject of his art but had become one of its structuring principles. In his latest show, Deutsch built on this earlier opposition, refining its terms and amplifying its psychological impact. The varied structures that once populated his canvases have given way to a particular architectural type: the single-family suburban home. Nestled amid dense foliage or presiding over manicured lawns and seen from a much closer (although still distinctly aerial) vantage, these houses are more iconic and anthropomorphic Having the characteristics of a human being. For example, an anthropomorphic robot has a head, arms and legs. than the buildings in his previous works. Like the dwellings painted by Edward Hopper Edward Hopper (July 22, 1882 – May 15, 1967) was an American painter and printmaker. His works represented light as it is reflected off of familiar objects. While most popularly known for his oil paintings, he was equally proficient as a watercolorist and printmaker in , Deutsch's suburban abodes are metaphors for the way that, in modern society, autonomy tends to slide into isolation and voyeurism Voyeurism See also Eavesdropping. Actaeon turned into stag for watching Artemis bathe. [Gk. Myth.: Leach, 8] elders of Babylon watch Susanna bathe. increasingly usurps more meaningful forms of human contact. But Deutsch's realism derives not from the observation of life (as Hopper's did) but from the imitation of a photographic image. In this respect Deutsch's paintings point to a very different predecessor: Gerhard Richter Gerhard Richter (born February 9, 1932) is a prominent German artist. Richter is considered by some critics as one of the most important German artists of the post-World War II period and is also one of the world's most expensive, with his paintings often selling for several . Richter's influence is especially prominent in Burgundy and Red Tudor (both 2000), in which Deutsch employs dragged and feathered brushstrokes to simulate photography's blurred registration of movement (one of Richter's signature techniques, which he developed in the early '60s). Deutsch, however, lacks that particular blend of technical virtuosity vir·tu·os·i·ty n. pl. vir·tu·os·i·ties 1. The technical skill, fluency, or style exhibited by a virtuoso or a composition. 2. An appreciation for or interest in fine objects of art. and emotional repression that Hopper and Richter can oddly be said to share. As a result, while resembling theirs, Deutsch's paintings pale in comparison. His photographs, though, are another matter. Initially used as source material and more recently conceived as independent works, they also take domestic architecture as their subject. But in this case, Deutsch's penchant for opposites (nature and culture, painting and photography, etc.) generates a project as compelling as it is original. Skimming through the nighttime skies in a helicopter equipped with a police searchlight searchlight, device, usually swiveled, using a lens and reflecting surface to direct a powerful beam of light of nearly parallel rays. In 1892 such apparatus was used along the English Channel in coastal defense and later, in the South African War, as an aid to , the artist stalks the single-family home like a big-game hunter. The resulting black-and-white photographs are an unlikely amalgam of the narrative and the taxonomic tax·o·nom·ic also tax·o·nom·i·cal adj. Of or relating to taxonomy: a taxonomic designation. tax . The harsh beams of light that abruptly pierce the surrounding blackness give the images a distinctly noirish feel and hint at sinister goings-on behind the suburban walls. But in the absence of a discernible story, what the searchlight reveals above all is the generic quality of these buildings, which can be found in every American suburb. This typological aspect, latent in all Deutsch's photographs, is made manifest by th e presentation strategy of his untitled smaller images, 1999-2000, which hung in the gallery's back room in floor-to-ceiling grids. Strangely, it is with these works, in which he comes most fully into his own, that Deutsch appears closest to Hopper--an artist who succinctly nails the uneasy mix of lurid fascination and utter banality that characterizes modern desire. |
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