Fernanda Gomes: Baumgartner Gallery. (New York).On entering Fernanda Gomes's second New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of solo show, the viewer was immediately confronted by a large metal scaffold on which the artist had placed various found objects. By far the most physically imposing work on display, this structure (all works untitled, 2001) nonetheless epitomizes Gomes's concerns-the most obvious and important of these being the way works of art engage with their surroundings. Standing under a skylight skylight Roof opening covered with translucent or transparent glass or plastic designed to admit daylight. Skylights have found wide application admitting steady, even light in industrial, commercial, and residential buildings, especially those with a northern orientation. whose rectangular shape it reiterated, the scaffold rhymed perfectly with the beams of the gallery's exposed wooden ceiling. Moreover, situated as it was directly across from the entrance, the piece conditioned the viewer's movements: to walk into the gallery was to approach the scaffold, to walk along the wall was to circumnavigate cir·cum·nav·i·gate tr.v. cir·cum·nav·i·gat·ed, cir·cum·nav·i·gat·ing, cir·cum·nav·i·gates 1. To proceed completely around: circumnavigating the earth. 2. it. In just the same way, the work itself was clearly conceived in response to the gallery space. The same is true of everything one encountered in Gomes's show--from the razor blade ra·zor·blade also ra·zor blade n. A thin sharp-edged piece of steel that can be fitted into a razor. razor blade n → hoja de afeitar razor blade stuck in the middle of a wall to the brown paper bags perched atop a column to the specks of dirt and broken glass scattered on the floor. And "encounter" is very much the operative term. Made almost exclusively from urban detritus detritus /de·tri·tus/ (de-tri´tus) particulate matter produced by or remaining after the wearing away or disintegration of a substance or tissue. de·tri·tus n. pl. collected on the streets of Chelsea during the six weeks leading up to the show's opening, the works were a record, or trace, of the artist's encounter with a particular site: the gallery and its immediate environs. The found objects included on the scaffold--two briefcases and two drinking glasses, one shattered, the other filled with water--attest to this fact. They also speak to Gomes's recasting of the artist qua itinerant ITINERANT. Travelling or taking a journey. In England there were formerly judges called Justices itinerant, who were sent with commissions into certain counties to try causes. scavenger of transitory materials. But while composed of lowly stuff, Gomes's art is extremely elegant visually. It's also often easy to miss. Craning one's neck, bending to the ground, peering into corners, one did not so much "look" at the pieces in this show as "discover" them (again, following the logic of the encounter). One work, a piece of Plexiglas placed flush on the floor, bordered on the imperceptible im·per·cep·ti·ble adj. 1. Impossible or difficult to perceive by the mind or senses: an imperceptible drop in temperature. 2. . But once noticed, the formal appeal of its streamlined simplicity was impossible to deny--as was its sly reference to monochrome painting Monochrome painting is sometimes seen as meditative art. Throughout the 20th century and into the 21st century painters have created monochromatic painting. The exploration of one color, the examination of values changing across a surface, the expressivity of texture and . In fact, quite a few pieces here resembled monochromes. Two--a mattress stripped down to its wooden support and a small picture frame, both covered on one side with sheets of white paper--are described by the artist as peinture. As Aleksandr Rodchenko observed as early as 1921, the monochrome's collapsing of figure and ground serves as a reminder that life inevitably forms the ground against which works of art are perceived. In this sense, it is a fitting emblem of Gomes's project, which so resolutely seeks to shift art's emphasis from the production of self-contained works to the creation of heightened states of awareness. But the figure ground equation can also run the other way, with art becoming ground to life's figure. Indeed, insofar in·so·far adv. To such an extent. Adv. 1. insofar - to the degree or extent that; "insofar as it can be ascertained, the horse lung is comparable to that of man"; "so far as it is reasonably practical he should practice as it invites the viewer to solemnly contemplate the beauty of everyday objects, this is precisely the risk that Gomes's work runs. |
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