David Korty: Greene Naftali. (New York).David Korty is quickly gaining a reputation for paintings imbued with the woozy atmospherics at·mos·pher·ics n. 1. (used with a sing. verb) a. Electromagnetic radiation produced by natural phenomena such as lightning. b. Radio interference produced by electromagnetic radiation. of Los Angeles, city of smog and sunshine. Recently, however, he has branched out to include scenes from Chicago and New York, for his first solo show in the latter city--calming compositions, notwithstanding their Day-Glo colors and hallucinogenic hal·lu·ci·no·gen n. A substance that induces hallucination. [hallucin(ation) + -gen.] hal·lu vibe. The first, busiest painting, Museum of Natural History (all works 2001), is set in the New York landmark's Hall of Biodiversity. Two blue-shadow human figures stand out against a splendid tapestry of life forms (yet are separated from the display by a railing, subtly reinforcing their position at the top of the food chain), while the foreground's reflective floor becomes an abstract fugue fugue (fy g) [Ital.,=flight], in music, a form of composition in which the basic principle is imitative counterpoint of several voices. of squiggles and spots in blue, yellow, and purplish red. Nightscape night·scape n. 1. A view or representation of a night scene. 2. A night scene considered together with all the elements and features constituting it: , in contrast, is a dreamy blizzard of white spatters on a gray background, magically conjuring the glittering outlines of several New York skyscrapers. Here Korty's approach recalls Turner's late landscapes, limaing the barest suggestion of representation from abstraction. The upward-directed perspective was perfect, highlighting the buildings' hugeness (and the city's), but their towering luminosity also evoked a now-poignant sense of comfort. Three paintings on another wall were linked by their focus on the effects of blinding sun and haze. Dept. of Water and Power shows an ugly landmark of 60s urban renewal, the facade's relentless grid of acid yellow, blue, and orange interrupted by a cluster of palm trees in the left foreground. In Capitol Records, the titular tit·u·lar adj. 1. Relating to, having the nature of, or constituting a title. 2. a. Existing in name only; nominal: the titular head of the family. b. building (another iconic LA institution and a kitsch standard of sorts) was placed slightly off-center, giving a pair of floodlights on the left, a mechanism supposed to draw attention to the structure, almost as much presence as the building itself. These works flanked Tree, with its brazen Klimtesque dazzle, its blue trunk and branches extending upward and outward to abstracted, confetti-like bursts of leaves and blossoms. As if to counter the subject's quasi-spiritual Tree of Life energy, a rigid gray office building lurks dully in the distance. Circle Line shows another New York institution, the Ellis Island ferry, festooned with streamers Streamers is a play by David Rabe. The last in his Vietnam War trilogy that began with The Basic Training of Pavlo Hummel and Sticks and Bones ; the hazily painted boat itself recedes somewhat, blending with the blue and white of the sky above and water below. The show ends as it began, with some human figures, here lounging in an urban meadow in Chicago under a sky that shifts from a pale pink to the lightest of blues at the top. Hyde Park is a Sunday on La Grande Jatte for the twenty-first century, a quietly utopian scene that stands in stark contrast to the buildings and smokestacks in the distance. With its colored-pencil details lifted from underlying acrylic washes, Korty's work stands out from the vogue for the latter-day Pop stylings of precise taped-off forms and cheerful superficiality. His is a more languorous lan·guor n. 1. Lack of physical or mental energy; listlessness. See Synonyms at lethargy. 2. A dreamy, lazy mood or quality: "It was hot, yet with a sweet languor about it" vision, with a well-honed sensibility for light and temperature that carefully distinguishes, say, the milky haze enveloping en·vel·op tr.v. en·vel·oped, en·vel·op·ing, en·vel·ops 1. To enclose or encase completely with or as if with a covering: "Accompanying the darkness, a stillness envelops the city" the Capitol Records headquarters from the harsh sun on the Department of Water and Power building. Though Korty takes off on traditions ranging from ancient Chinese landscape painting and nineteenth-century Impressionism impressionism, in painting impressionism, in painting, late-19th-century French school that was generally characterized by the attempt to depict transitory visual impressions, often painted directly from nature, and by the use of pure, broken color to to Ed Ruscha's mystical urbanism, the result feels fresh and of its time: modern pleasures rendered with postironic romanticism and old-fashioned technical panache. |
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