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Darren Waterston: Charles Cowles Gallery. (New York).


Whatever else it may be, postmodern painting tends to be art-historically self-conscious, saturated with double entendres, and executed in an astute, "crafty" way: tightly controlled no matter how impulsive and free-spirited it may look, no matter how uncanny the associations it engenders might seem. In such work it becomes impossible to separate the cognitive from the aesthetic. Darren Waterston's exquisite canvases fit the postmodern bill. They use biological imagery--not an overdone o·ver·done  
v.
Past participle of overdo.

Adj. 1. overdone - represented as greater than is true or reasonable; "an exaggerated opinion of oneself"
exaggerated, overstated
, semi-subjective biomorphism Biomorphism is an art movement that began in the 20th century.

The term was first used in 1936, by Alfred H. Barr, Jr. Biomorphist art focuses on the power of natural life and uses organic shapes, with shapeless and vaguely spherical hints of the forms of biology.
 but a freshly objective sense of microscopic reality--to create what could be regarded as an eccentric version of Abstract Expressionism abstract expressionism, movement of abstract painting that emerged in New York City during the mid-1940s and attained singular prominence in American art in the following decade; also called action painting and the New York school.  but is really too idiosyncratic id·i·o·syn·cra·sy  
n. pl. id·i·o·syn·cra·sies
1. A structural or behavioral characteristic peculiar to an individual or group.

2. A physiological or temperamental peculiarity.

3.
 to be classifiable. At the same time, the works are meticulously painterly--or epically lyrical, to convey the ambiguity that makes them critical. They rearticulate the organic at its most fundamental, which may be the final frontier of visual as well as intellectual mystery.

Thus Lymph Nodes Lymph nodes
Small, bean-shaped masses of tissue scattered along the lymphatic system that act as filters and immune monitors, removing fluids, bacteria, or cancer cells that travel through the lymph system.
 (all works 2001) is an enlarged, beautifully colored "vision" of those oddly elegant masses. But the painting is much more than an aestheticized specimen--it is anatomically accurate, as if based on angiographs. These glands are fundamental for health: The lymphocytes Lymphocytes
Small white blood cells that bear the major responsibility for carrying out the activities of the immune system; they number about 1 trillion.
 they manufacture are crucial for the production of antibodies. The work seems to allude obliquely to AIDS, but it is also an intriguing re-rendering of the abstract sublime, a romantic vision of space inseparable from that of modernist painting. Indeed, Waterston's softer shapes, which resemble ethereal ethereal /ethe·re·al/ (e-ther´e-il)
1. pertaining to, prepared with, containing, or resembling ether.

2. evanescent; delicate.


e·the·re·al
adj.
1.
 undersea growths, seem to reprise re·prise  
n.
1. Music
a. A repetition of a phrase or verse.

b. A return to an original theme.

2. A recurrence or resumption of an action.

tr.v.
, however covertly and perhaps ironically, Clyfford Still's harsher, more rugged inner edges, which do not so much float in space as anchor it. Waterston's shapes simply hover, though they do suggest the autonomy of the space surrounding them.

To borrow the title of one painting here, Waterston finds all his various materials "inside you"--within the organic mystery of the body. He reminds you that what may seem upsetting or untouchable untouchable

Former classification of various low-status persons and those outside the Hindu caste system in Indian society. The term Dalit is now used for such people (in preference to Mohandas K.
 has been studied and represented by scientists in microscopic detail. Waterston revels in the simultaneous abstraction and concreteness of science. His renderings are biologically correct, like Odilon Redon's "monsters," which were so anatomically accurate that Louis Pasteur thought they ought to have existed. But far from morbidly monstrous, Waterston's abstract representations are exhilarating. Nature is aesthetically "responsible," as Einstein suggested; and as Froth implies, even at its most organically fluid, nature is also aesthetically "comprehensible" in a perceptual ecstasy. Much the way D'Arcy Thompson, the first biomathematician, found formal correspondences among different structures in nature, so Waterston, exploring cross-references among shapes in animal and vegetable bodies (e.g., between the human t hroat and a flower in Throat Petals), brings out the inherent abstract/concrete poetry of nature. His paintings are epiphanies that make the devious universality of biological morphologies subtly evident.
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Author:Kuspit, Donald
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Feb 1, 2002
Words:448
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