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JULES OLITSKI.


AMERINGER/HOWARD FINE ART

I don't know if Jules Olitski is the greatest living painter, as Clement Greenberg once claimed, but his late works certainly offer a supreme abstract version of the "splendid manner," a term Giovanni Pietro Bellori applied to the paintings of Nicolas Poussin in the seventeenth century. A splendid manner requires above all grand subject matter: in Poussin's case, scenes from the Bible and Greek myth; in Olitski's, our origins, both personal and universal, and our common end in death and (one hopes) transfiguration Transfiguration, in the New Testament, manifestation wherein Jesus appeared "shining" before Peter, James, and John. The traditional explanation is that in it Jesus' divine glory shone in his earthly body. Mt. . Bellori considered Poussin the ultimate philosophical painter; Olitski, with these recent works, seems to have become the philosopher of the abstract manner sine qua non [Latin, Without which not.] A description of a requisite or condition that is indispensable.

In the law of torts, a causal connection exists between a particular act and an injury when the injury would not have arisen but
, in part through the sheer brilliance and sparkling complexity of his painterliness, in part through his ability to make the animated indefiniteness of his seismic surfaces, surging and swerving in luminous liquidity, seem like a wild analysis of existential concerns.

In the "Origins" series (all works 2000), Olitski broods on his own beginnings, beyond the pale of his memory. Born in 1922 in Snovsk (now Sednev, Ukraine), he emigrated with his mother and grandmother to the United States in 1923; he never knew his father, a commissar com·mis·sar  
n.
1.
a. An official of the Communist Party in charge of political indoctrination and the enforcement of party loyalty.

b. The head of a commissariat in the Soviet Union until 1946.

2.
 executed by the Soviet regime a few months before his son's birth. In these works, Olitski uses the medium to articulate his earliest, preverbal pre·verb·al  
adj.
1. Preceding the verb.

2.
a. Having not yet learned to speak: preverbal children.

b.
 feelings. These paintings are ineffable, even "infantile," in the original sense of the term (unable to speak). Olitski's reflections on his birthplace are as mercurial mercurial /mer·cu·ri·al/ (mer-kur´e-il)
1. pertaining to mercury.

2. a preparation containing mercury.


mer·cu·ri·al
adj.
 as his paint, as tropical and stormy as the weather in Florida, where the artist finds himself late in life. In other words Adv. 1. in other words - otherwise stated; "in other words, we are broke"
put differently
, he uses what Greenberg called "Mediterranean style" to make a subjective "statement," however obscure it may be.

We feel the intensity of Olitski's statement all the more when it acquires biblical dimensions, as in Third Day, where magnificent black "cracks" fragment the color-saturated surface. I'd even take Olitski's rendering of eschatological es·cha·tol·o·gy  
n.
1. The branch of theology that is concerned with the end of the world or of humankind.

2. A belief or a doctrine concerning the ultimate or final things, such as death, the destiny of humanity, the Second
 tragedy in Last Judgement over Michelangelo's more bombastic, crowded scene in the Sistine Chapel: Olitski shows the abyss of nothingness that awaits us, while Michelangelo frets over his place in heaven (will God give him commissions?). Olitski suggests there is no heaven, only mythologized sky, with light breaking through the gathering darkness and brooding clouds. He is in effect exploring his own fragmentary, fleeting, but nonetheless powerful feelings about his origin, universalizing them through the meandering differentiations of 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.
 surface, nuanced with shifting luminosities and sudden blackness.

Greenberg traced modernist field painting from Titian Titian (tĭsh`ən), c.1490–1576, Venetian painter, whose name was Tiziano Vecellio, b. Pieve di Cadore in the Dolomites. Of the very first rank among the artists of the Renaissance, Titian had an immense influence on succeeding generations  through late Monet to Pollock and finally Olitski (with smaller steps along the way), and in strictly aesthetic terms Olitski's paintings (particularly those in the "Celebrations" series) are Titianesque masterpieces--say, Titian in Florida, where light, atmosphere, and water are much more magical than they ever are in Venice. In Greenberg's thinking, Olitski not only completely gave himself up to feeling but achieved what the critic called a "decorative unity" of surface, which for him signaled mastery of feeling, and with it strength and self-control.
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Author:Kuspit, Donald
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Dec 1, 2000
Words:500
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