Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,380,430 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Elizabeth Rosenblum.


Elizabeth Rosenblum's recent paintings bear witness to the increasingly complex conceptual and esthetic concerns of an artist coming to terms with manic depression. Entitled "Phobias Phobias Definition

A phobia is an intense but unrealistic fear that can interfere with the ability to socialize, work, or go about everyday life, brought on by an object, event or situation.
, Manias and other Aberrations," this show featured nineteen 18-by-18-inch collage paintings that examine clinical terms as defined in a 1953 medical text, Encyclopedia of Aberrations. Also included is Mad Rant, 1992, an oversized image of Sally Field as the Flying Nun overlaid with such phrases as "Boil me," "Barbed Wire," and "Make it Stop," which represent the soaring highs and severe lows of manic depression. The smaller paintings, each dominated at the bottom by the phrase "anxiety aroused," more subtly explore the chasm that exists between the impersonal and degrading technical language of psychiatric medicine and the reality of living with mental illness. Rosenblum further satirizes the disjunction disjunction /dis·junc·tion/ (-junk´shun)
1. the act or state of being disjoined.

2. in genetics, the moving apart of bivalent chromosomes at the first anaphase of meiosis.
 between scientific nomenclature and the behavior it describes by merging glossary text with images appropriated from various sources, including medical journals, Victorian pattern books, and comic strips. Inspired by Sigmar Polke, Rosenblum applies multiple layers of epoxy resin to high-resolution acetate photocopies of images and text. Her various concoctions of acetate, pigment, dyes, resins, and inks applied to raw or gessoed drop cloths are sealed with glossy laminate. The resulting viscous and bubbly surfaces blend with grounds of juicy earth-toned spatters and drips.

What give her best canvases their bite are Rosenblum's clever juxtapositions of words, underpainting In art, an underpainting is an initial layer of paint applied to a ground, which serves as a base for subsequent layers of paint. Underpaintings are often monochromatic and help to define colour values for later painting. , and appropriated images. Ecdysiasm, 1992, describes the impulse to disrobe in public, using overlapping images of aberrant enlarged labia and phalliform clitorises. In Mysophobia mysophobia /my·so·pho·bia/ (-fo´be-ah) irrational fear of dirt and contamination.

my·so·pho·bi·a
n.
An abnormal fear of dirt or contamination.
, 1992, the irrational fear of dirt or contamination is made more emphatic by the layering of the glossary definitions over a simulated black grease stain. Logorrhea logorrhea /log·or·rhea/ (-re´ah) pressured speech; excessive and rapid speech, seen in certain mental disorders.

log·or·rhe·a
n.
Excessive use of words.
, 1992, is a conceptual and technical tour de force. The main text, which describes "incessant talking; usually in the sense that the speech is repetitious rep·e·ti·tious  
adj.
Filled with repetition, especially needless or tedious repetition.



repe·ti
 and full of circumlocutions but not incoherent," is placed over a partially obscured acetate photocopy of a case history drawn from the "Body Image Disturbance" section of the Encyclopedia of Aberrations. The word "aroused" is printed three times, like a stutter stut·ter
n.
A phonatory or articulatory disorder characterized by difficult enunciation of words with frequent halting and repetition of the initial consonant or syllable.

v.
To utter with spasmodic repetition or prolongation of sounds.
. Multiple layers of epoxy resin mixed with brown pigments and dyes partially obscure the text.

The artist's rage at the objectifying language doctors use in the face of human pain and vulnerability emerges eloquently from each of the 19 canvases. Formally they could be characterized as neo-Expressionist paintings; works such as Ochlophobia och·lo·pho·bi·a  
n.
An abnormal fear of crowds.



[Greek okhlos, crowd; see wegh- in Indo-European roots + -phobia.
, 1992, are actually quite spontaneously and intuitively created. The defining phrase "fear of crowds" covers a lovely miniature yellow-white-and-black approximation of a Franz Kline action painting. It is a mistake to privilege the conceptual angst and rhetorical intent of these pieces: the ideas are often clever vehicles for an equally important painterly paint·er·ly  
adj.
1. Of, relating to, or characteristic of a painter; artistic.

2.
a. Having qualities unique to the art of painting.

b.
 process.
COPYRIGHT 1993 Artforum International Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1993, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Title Annotation:Gallery Naga, Boston, Massachusetts
Author:Miller, Francis Koslow
Publication:Artforum International
Date:Jan 1, 1993
Words:451
Previous Article:Jaune Quick-to-See Smith. (Steinbaum Krauss Gallery, New York, New York)
Next Article:Robert Lostutter. (Phyllis Kind Gallery, Chicago, Illinois)
Topics:



Related Articles
George A. Fuller to manage Boston courthouse project. (George A. Fuller Co.; Federal Courthouse in Boston, Massachusetts)
A New View From the Wings Dance scape.(Brief Article)
Over the Line: The Art and Life of Jacob Lawrence.(Brief Article)
Muntean/Rosenblum: Galerie Georg Kargl. (Vienna).(Markus Muntean, Adi Rosenblum)(Brief Article)
Federal Open Market Committee and Advisory Councils.(membership)
John Currin: Museum of Contemporary Art. (Chicago).(Brief Article)
New England.
Lethal Elegance.(Brief Article)(Book Review)
Hockney heads home.(ART)
Amputation no bar: vets enjoy NAGA golf.

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles