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Emil Corsillo: Green Street Gallery.


The seven large enamel-on-wood-panel paintings in Boston-based artist Emil Corsillo's debut solo exhibition picture a quasi-abstract apocalyptic urban landscape devoid of living things. Rendered using superimposed su·per·im·pose  
tr.v. su·per·im·posed, su·per·im·pos·ing, su·per·im·pos·es
1. To lay or place (something) on or over something else.

2.
 source photographs of construction and demolition sites, the protagonists of these hard-edged images are I-beam frame works, chain-link fences, concrete barriers, and caution stripes.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Although Corsillo claims a formal allegiance to Russian Constructivism constructivism, Russian art movement founded c.1913 by Vladimir Tatlin, related to the movement known as suprematism. After 1916 the brothers Naum Gabo and Antoine Pevsner gave new impetus to Tatlin's art of purely abstract (although politically intended) , the planar austerity and bold machismo machismo

Exaggerated pride in masculinity, perceived as power, often coupled with a minimal sense of responsibility and disregard of consequences. In machismo there is supreme valuation of characteristics culturally associated with the masculine and a denigration of
 of his fragmented architectural forms more strongly recall the pre-World War I Vorticist paintings of Wyndham Lewis, in which buildings--arranged as precisely contoured verticals and diagonals--appear ready to collapse. And while much of the work is derived from the physical upheaval of such contemporary local events as Boston's "Big Dig" (an ambitious program of highway, bridge, and tunnel construction) and the 2004 Democratic National Convention, it maintains an eerie timelessness and sense of impending im·pend  
intr.v. im·pend·ed, im·pend·ing, im·pends
1. To be about to occur: Her retirement is impending.

2.
 doom. Titles like Free Speech Zone, Church and State, and Hubris (all works 2004) confirm Corsillo's political concerns.

The eighty-by-ninety-inch triptych Free Speech Zone depicts Corsillo's view of the confining environment created by a chain-link fence erected during the DNC DNC Democratic National Committee
DNC Democratic National Convention
DNC Do Not Call
DNC Delaware North Companies
DNC Domain Name Commissioner
DNC Direct Numerical Control
DNC Do Not Change
DNC Does Not Compute
DNC Digital Nautical Chart
 to enclose protestors. In the right foreground, a sharp piece of concrete from a pile of Big Dig rubble juts through an opening in the fence, its energy diffused by yellow and black diagonal lines semingly urging caution. The image gets its emotional punch from both a sequence of disorienting dis·o·ri·ent  
tr.v. dis·o·ri·ent·ed, dis·o·ri·ent·ing, dis·o·ri·ents
To cause (a person, for example) to experience disorientation.

Adj. 1.
 juxtapositions and from the artist's positioning of us up close to the scene.

In the diptych O'er the Ramparts, Corsillo effectively combines realistically detailed areas of texture with simplified linear forms. White concrete Jersey barriers placed around Boston's Federal Reserve building--presumably to protect it from terrorist attack--are dwarfed by intersecting gunmetal gunmetal, a bronze, an alloy of copper, tin, and a small amount of zinc. Although originally used extensively for making guns (from which it received its name), it has been superseded by steel, and it is now chiefly employed in casting machine parts.  gray and silver buildings and a background of more black and yellow caution stripes. Two tumbling, vertically aligned parallelograms make obvious reference to the World Trade Center. The artist breaks up the flat, enamel forms by spraying and splattering high-key orange, red, and green paint freely across their rigid surfaces and intricate angles. In an artist's statement, Corsillo explains his reasons for selecting a phrase from "The Star Spangled span·gle  
n.
1. A small, often circular piece of sparkling metal or plastic sewn especially on garments for decoration.

2. A small sparkling object, drop, or spot: spangles of sunlight.
 Banner" as the work's title. According to him, ruminations on America's foundations in war led to a painting about "the division between the battleground and the safe-zone, the division between just and unjust war, the division between two sides fighting each other--and what it might be like to be on the other side."

Corsillo is most effective when he is the least literal and illusionistic. Less successful are paintings such as the posterlike Ministry of Peace, the Orwellian title of which refers to one of four government agencies in charge of war in 1984. The chimneys of a all building are shown surrounded by an army of attacking helicopters, stenciled on an orange sky striped with white. Evocative of social realist propaganda, the earnest image is as contrived as a Hollywood film still. In his most recent, more resolved diptych, The End, Corsillo employs a muted palette of blacks, grays, and mauves. Hidden in the intersections of geometric shapes touched with a dapple Dapple

Sancho’s ass. [Span. Lit.: Don Quixote]

See : Ass
 of paint that resembles digital pixilation This article is about the animation technique. For the graphics effect induced by enlarging a bitmap, see pixelation. For the image-editing technique of displaying part of an image at low resolution, see pixelization.  are the steel girders of historic elevated-train tracks, fated for imminent destruction. Corsillo's metaphoric images of the rise and fall of his city become more meaningful precisely through their formal neytrality.
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Title Annotation:BOSTON; enamel-on-wood-panel paintings
Author:Miller, Francine Koslow
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Critical Essay
Date:Mar 1, 2005
Words:551
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