Gagosian gallery: Ellen Gallagher. (Reviews).Slyly lovely and perversely indirect, Ellen Gallagher's work concerns inscription and sign systems and addresses the fragmentations and provocations of racialized identity. She belongs to a generation of young artists who infuse Minimalist form with corporeal, social, and emotive content: The apparent serenity of her large, airy paintings exists in tension with the marginalia mar·gi·na·li·a pl.n. Notes in the margin or margins of a book. [New Latin, neuter pl. of Medieval Latin margin yielded by a closer look--snippets of nasty minstrelsy, secret doodles, and ragged grids of grade-school penmanship paper. In these nine canvases, comprising the artist's third exhibition in New York, all this and more was on display. The show was titled "Blubber," a word evocative of clumsy grief and Melville's well-known chapter on "The Whiteness of the Whale"--not to mention Judy Blume's tale of particularly female grammar-school cruelty. Resonant with but not circumscribed circumscribed /cir·cum·scribed/ (serk´um-skribd) bounded or limited; confined to a limited space. cir·cum·scribed adj. Bounded by a line; limited or confined. by these citations, Blubber, 2000, is a rhythmic, lyrical painting, with a comma-like shape repeating in collaged paper and dollops of black ink. Here-as in They could still serve, 2000 a, field of pink-stained notebook sheets, and ly, 2000, a more directly calligraphic piece-- Gallagher lets a minimal palette of creamy, rosy, chalky, and occasionally bilious bil·ious adj. 1. Of, relating to, or containing bile; biliary. 2. Characterized by an excess secretion of bile. 3. color do most of the signifying. Alluring and somewhat fearsomely empty, the shifting flesh-and-paper tonalities hold the images at a liminal liminal /lim·i·nal/ (lim´i-n'l) barely perceptible; pertaining to a threshold. lim·i·nal adj. Relating to a threshold. liminal barely perceptible; pertaining to a threshold. point where the bodily shades toward the semiotic. This infusion of subjective meaning into "pure" materials also shapes Gallagher's black panels, bling bling, 2001, and the diptych Dance you monster, 2000. Encased in their glossy surfaces are accretions of cutout rubber d ots like whirlwinds of blowing hair. An anthropomorphic Having the characteristics of a human being. For example, an anthropomorphic robot has a head, arms and legs. echo hovers around the silhouette of a tree. Portrait, pastoral, or scene of a lynching? None of the above? The pale surfaces are scarified and delicate, while the black ones are tarry, reflective, unfathomable. The former summon, then elude the gaze; the latter totalize and swallow it. Whatever associations such obvious black/white oppositions may stimulate in her viewers, Gallagher invites but refuses to resolve them. This practice of instituting and then tweaking or emptying symbol systems undergirds the artist's use of a personal, rebuslike lexicon. Those who have followed Gallagher's work will have learned, for example, that Blubber's "commas" stand for a cartoonish wig, a glyph A displayed or printed image. In typography, a glyph may be a single letter, an accent mark or a ligature. See grapheme. (character) glyph - An image used in the visual representation of characters; roughly speaking, how a character looks. A font is a set of glyphs. for "girl," while the "eyes" and ellipsoid "lips" (seen here in Spoor spoor n. The track or trail of an animal, especially a wild animal. v. spoored, spoor·ing, spoors tr. & intr.v. To track (an animal) by following its spoor or to engage in such tracking. , 2001, Purgatorium, 2000, and Bubbel, 2000, notate no·tate tr.v. no·tat·ed, no·tat·ing, no·tates To put into notation. [Back-formation from notation.] Verb 1. the caricatured and dismembered black body. As carriers of political content, Gallagher's stylized styl·ize tr.v. styl·ized, styl·iz·ing, styl·iz·es 1. To restrict or make conform to a particular style. 2. To represent conventionally; conventionalize. marks have always been vexed, because unless the viewer is told what they are supposed to represent, they don't quite represent it. This has meant that the images rely on an extravisual critical apparatus in order to read as intended, and it's inevitably problematic when the press release provides the key to a viewing experience. It is not Gallagher's mandate, however, to illustrate simplistic sim·plism n. The tendency to oversimplify an issue or a problem by ignoring complexities or complications. [French simplisme, from simple, simple, from Old French; see simple sociopolitical propositions. Do her cryptic extrapolations of violent cliches encourage interesting thinking about race, sensuality, and representation? The answer, for this viewer at least, is yes, because they force us to consider our assumption (or wish) that statements about race should be readily cognizable-that is, consumable. On the contrary, these paintings are elusive, ambiguously pleasurable, private. Now, perversely, the more her quiet surfaces and their complicated meanings harmonize, the more beauty threatens to become a liability for Gallagher. Loveliness is her strength; she can afford to play against it. Something dangerous and raucous remains crucial to her mix. |
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