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ELLIOTT PUCKETTE.


PAUL KASMIN GALLERY

The word "decorative" has carried a pejorative connotation in criticism ever since Clement Greenberg. What makes Elliott Puckette's paintings interesting is that, rather than integrate the decorative in a larger expressive purpose, the artist finds expressive purpose within the decorative itself. Her meandering lines, which at times scroll baroquely-incised with a razor, they recall the elaborate linear fantasies that Albrecht Durer inscribed in·scribe  
tr.v. in·scribed, in·scrib·ing, in·scribes
1.
a. To write, print, carve, or engrave (words or letters) on or in a surface.

b. To mark or engrave (a surface) with words or letters.
 in the margins of his unfinished prayer book for Maximilian I-communicate excitement, perhaps because they lead nowhere in particular, even as their curves evoke the female body. They bring to mind the scrambled contours of an odalisque, fragments of an intricate idea of the feminine.

Puckette's washy, drippy drip·py  
adj. drip·pi·er, drip·pi·est
1. Characterized by dripping; drizzly: a drippy, wet day.

2. Slang
a. Tiresome or annoying.

b.
 surfaces--which, in their own way, brood on the void-have a similar erotic nervousness. Her decorative conveys a desire unsure of yet excited by itself-or perhaps only a sense of misguided jouissance Jou´is`sance

n. 1. Jollity; merriment.
. Indeed, automatism automatism

Method of painting or drawing in which conscious control over the movement of the hand is suppressed so that the subconscious mind may take over. For some Abstract Expressionists, such as Jackson Pollock, the automatic process encompassed the entire process of
, which is implicit in her lines, is a kind of masturbatory mas·tur·ba·to·ry  
adj.
1. Of or relating to masturbation.

2. Excessively self-indulgent or self-involved: "[The play's] star . . .
 activity, a spilling of the seeds of self-excitement in a naive search for originality. If, as Roland Barthes says, jouissance is "pleasure without separation," that is, erotic transcendence, then the free-floating contours, or boundaries, in Puckette's Reckoning and Tyne, both 1999, can be read as traces of separation. But they also suggest a discomfort with pleasure--a dissonance within the field of radiant color that is the substance of her paintings. Sensuousness abounds in Puckette's works, signaling their homage to the pleasure principle, but there is something jarring about her unsettled lines. They seem foreplay foreplay /fore·play/ (for´pla) the sexually stimulating play preceding intercourse.

fore·play
n.
The sexual stimulation that precedes intercourse.
 to a consummation that never quite comes off. Weirdly forced, her lines are the most intere sting--indeed, redeeming-aspect of her paintings, because their suggestion of aborted pleasure throws a monkey wrench into the abstract luxe of her titillating tit·il·late  
v. tit·il·lat·ed, tit·il·lat·ing, tit·il·lates

v.tr.
1. To stimulate by touching lightly; tickle.

2. To excite (another) pleasurably, superficially or erotically.
 surfaces.

Puckette is at her best when she uses the ellipse and tondo ton·do  
n. pl. ton·dos also ton·di
A round painting, relief, or similar work of art.



[Italian, short for rotondo, round, from Latin rotundus; see rotund.]
 to frame her abstractions. Their curvilinearity gives the works body, even as it reaffirms the suaveness of her lines. The rectangle disrupts the flow of the lines, making them less suggestive of the infinite--less like gestures in a void. One cannot help thinking of Ingres's harem tondo and seeing Puckette's lines as illicitly heaving and embracing bodies, as vestiges of transgressive passion. Such associations hardly add up to full-fledged interpretations, but they do convey the lively, complex sense of pleasure, however distilled, in Puckerte's pictures. In short, abstraction remains home to pure pleasure as well as pure transcendence--the two are not unrelated-which makes one wonder why there has to be any attempt to represent reality, that is, to construct an illusion that laboriously communicates what can be spontaneously evoked by surface or intimated by carefully manicured color alone.
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Author:Kuspit, Donald
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Feb 1, 2000
Words:440
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