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Jane Kaplowitz.


Jane Kaplowitz would agree with Jean Cocteau that "style is the soul." She is a connoisseur of Pop, of camp, and of "appropriation." As if to establish her post-Modern credentials beyond a doubt, she has made an ironic play with motifs from Pablo Picasso, Henri Matisse Noun 1. Henri Matisse - French painter and sculptor; leading figure of fauvism (1869-1954)
Henri Emile Benoit Matisse, Matisse
, Josef Albers Noun 1. Josef Albers - United States painter born in Germany; works characterized by simple geometrical patterns in various colors (1888-1976)
Albers
, and others, but the irony of these earlier paintings can seem a little forced and, as a consequence, they fail to make the transition to the pure visual wit we can now see she was always aiming at. The new paintings are airy, evanescent ev·a·nes·cent
adj.
Of short duration; passing away quickly.
, and lyrical in a strictly Firbankian manner. In them she celebrates the heroes of her personal camp pantheon--Cocteau in bed with a mask of Antigone, Oliver Messel Oliver Hilary Sambourne Messel (b. January 13, 1904 - d. July 13, 1978) was an English artist and one of the foremost stage designers of the 20th century. Biography
Early years
 painting a mural in the Dorchester Hotel, Stephen Tennant (the most outrageous English queen of the '20s and '30s) reclining on the bed he rarely left in his later years, while unfolding an enormous fan towards the seated figure of David Hockney.

All the paintings are based on photographs. All are painted lightly and fluidly, and two of them are painted on a large scale on the walls of the gallery, so that the result is an environment of delicate irony and artifice that at first charms you, then leaves you with an odd sense of pathos. Kaplowitz is not aiming at profundity, but it is tempting to look for a subtext sub·text  
n.
1. The implicit meaning or theme of a literary text.

2. The underlying personality of a dramatic character as implied or indicated by a script or text and interpreted by an actor in performance.
. With the exception of Hockney, all the figures she has chosen to paint are to some degree marginal, and all but one are gay men: Messel was an interior decorator, Tennant an aristocratic dilettante dil·et·tante  
n. pl. dil·et·tantes also dil·et·tan·ti
1. A dabbler in an art or a field of knowledge. See Synonyms at amateur.

2. A lover of the fine arts; a connoisseur.

adj.
 and, thanks to his supposed frivolity Frivolity
Blondie

the gaffe-prone, frivolous wife of Dagwood Bumstead. [Comics: Horn, 118]

Dobson, Zuleika

charming young lady who unconcernedly dazzles Oxford undergraduates. [Br. Lit.
 and snobbishness, Cocteau's reputation has been under a cloud for some decades. One might also argue that Hockney is currently more interesting as a set-designer than as a painter, and is thus perilously close to being a "mere" decorator. This is not Kaplowitz's view, and in one of her murals she defiantly presents us with a gaggle of fashionable '40s interior decorators relaxing in a fussy rococo salon. Though not didactically so, Kaplowitz's stance is surely an implicit critique of the official canon of high seriousness, a canon that has had a particularly oppressive effect on the reputations of certain gay male and female artists.

The other mural in the show is called An Artist's Studio, 1992, and the artist in question is a woman. Evidently 19th-century, and doubtless forgotten by art history, she sits comfortably on a sofa in the corner of the room reading a small book; schematic portraits hang above her; spindly spin·dly  
adj. spin·dli·er, spin·dli·est
Slender and elongated, especially in a way that suggests weakness.


spindly
Adjective

[-dlier, -dliest
 furniture lines the walls. The painting makes no attempt to reproduce the original photographic image with literal accuracy, emphasizing, instead, a kind of careless elegance. It is essentially an enormous wall-sketch, tinted with pastel blues, pinks and yellows. Given the centralized perspective, the large scale, and the plain yellow floorboards that fill the foreground, the work resembles the backdrop for some lost comedy of manners comedy of manners

Witty, ironic form of drama that satirizes the manners and fashions of a particular social class or set. Comedies of manners were usually written by sophisticated authors for members of their own social class, and they typically are concerned with social
, or a ballet with music by Georges Auric or Germaine Tailleferre. Its charm is undeniable, its seriousness less immediately evident. But Kaplowitz is passionately committed to her material, and this show--which is her best--presents a persuasive argument in favor of the delight to be derived from artistic productions that would normally be classified as minor, even frivolous. The dullest person can be serious, but true frivolity demands inventiveness and the ability to take joy in life.
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Copyright 1993, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:Jason McCoy Inc. Gallery, New York, New York
Author:Ash, John
Publication:Artforum International
Date:Dec 1, 1993
Words:567
Previous Article:Willem de Kooning. (C&M Arts Gallery, New York, New York)
Next Article:Alexander Calder. (Gagosian Gallery, New York, New York)
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