Hermann Nitsch: Mike Weiss Gallery.There are many paths to ecstasy. Some, pace Blake, lead down the road of excess, while others go the way of asceticism asceticism (əsĕt`ĭsĭzəm), rejection of bodily pleasures through sustained self-denial and self-mortification, with the objective of strengthening spiritual life. . The relationship between heightened states of mind and the process of artmaking has always been close, with the construction of icons, their erasure, and the hard contemplation of color serving as perennial avenues to revelation. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] The latest evidence of a nascent trend in the art world toward gnomic gno·mic adj. Marked by aphorisms; aphoristic: gnomic verse; a gnomic style. gnomic Adjective Literary , incantatory in·can·ta·tion n. 1. Ritual recitation of verbal charms or spells to produce a magic effect. 2. a. A formula used in ritual recitation; a verbal charm or spell. b. , and psychedelic ways of creating--alongside the rekindled interest in elder visionaries such as Joan Jonas and Charlemagne Palestine can be seen the generally mystical disposition of many younger artists these days--was a new show by Hermann Nitsch, one of the arch-progenitors of Viennese Actionism, whose gory practice, which now spans forty years, is perhaps only distantly related to that of his American peers but, at the same time, cosmically filial filial /fil·i·al/ (fil´e-al) 1. of or pertaining to a son or daughter. 2. in genetics, of or pertaining to those generations following the initial (parental) generation. . In his first appearance in New York since a 1999 minisurvey with Gunter Brus at White Box, Nitsch presented two rooms of gestural abstract paintings (all 2003) accompanied by chiming music and (during the opening) freshly cut flowers. The front room was all yellow--eight serial panels of whorls and sunbursts and two larger canvases featuring thick impastos of lemon-colored paint applied largely by brush, with T-shirts flattened into the goo as if crucified. The back room was all red--fourteen large, multipaneled works sporting big (thrown?) splashes of crimson over garnet ground. Also in the back room was a large wooden apparatus, part easel, part crucifix, holding sheets of linen soiled with a brownish red fluid--the remains, apparently, of some offstage blood rite. Stacked in near rows on smaller, sawhorse-type structures throughout the gallery were sugar cubes and paper napkins and two heavily embroidered em·broi·der v. em·broi·dered, em·broi·der·ing, em·broi·ders v.tr. 1. To ornament with needlework: embroider a pillow cover. 2. ceremonial robes. Though there was something a little shameless in Nitsch's open theatricality--the brash, singular colors mashed on the walls, the religious paraphernalia, the clamoring sound track and props--there was also a kind of honesty and clarity of purpose at work, a true showman's broadness of expression. The effect Nitsch achieved was purgative purgative /pur·ga·tive/ (purg´it-iv) cathartic (1, 2). pur·ga·tive n. An agent used for purging the bowels. adj. Tending to cause evacuation of the bowels. , nearly homiletic hom·i·let·ic also hom·i·let·i·cal adj. 1. Relating to or of the nature of a homily. 2. Relating to homiletics. [Late Latin hom : "You will have a God feeling now," one can imagine him exhorting his audience, shaking its lapels. The droning bells and huge swaths of color, for all their bombast, did manage to induce, at least in this viewer, a crude mental movement toward transcendence. Why does Nitsch's work seem vaguely au courant? Perhaps the last decade's technological patina (or pallor pallor /pal·lor/ (pal´er) paleness, as of the skin. pal·lor n. Paleness, as of the skin. ) has finally worn off, and people want more earth in their art. Or maybe the political exigencies of the day call for more primal, bellowing expressions of angst. In any case, the search for transcendent meaning has gathered fresh urgency, and the energy Nitsch brings to his hoary hoar·y adj. hoar·i·er, hoar·i·est 1. Gray or white with or as if with age. 2. Covered with grayish hair or pubescence: hoary leaves. 3. practice can't be denied. Whatever path this man has followed, it seems to be working. |
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