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Jutta Koether: Thomas Erben Gallery.


Jutta Koether is an artist who paints, but she is not exclusively a "painter." She is also a performance artist, musician, writer, and art and music critic. And while painting sometimes plays a supporting role in her performance art, in her music for example, it isn't part of the mix at all. Yet her interests always overlap, establishing common ground. One such area is the aesthetics of punk, through which Koether channels German "bad painting," East Village garishness, and flashy '80s commodity art in a range of styles that are historically savvy yet burst with youthful energy. Critique is not part of the picture, nor is irony--Koether doesn't appropriate earlier styles in order to empty them out or dissipate their power. Rather, she samples a range of good, bad, and ugly painterly genres with such verve that her paintings seem happy and carefree even if, at times, they verge on chaotic mess. Their sense of jubilance makes them more compatible with contemporary attitudes in art, specifically with the current penchant for juvenilia ju·ve·nil·i·a  
pl.n.
Works, particularly written or artistic works, produced in an author's or artist's youth.



[Latin iuven
 and laid-back, faux-adolescent aesthetics.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Koether's first New York survey, "I Is Had Gone," brought together a cross-section of paintings from 1990 to the present. These were installed in a tacky interior that featured dull silver walls, large mirrored Mylar panels draped with a single, unfinished piece of golden fabric, a curtain made of silver and gold streamers Streamers is a play by David Rabe.

The last in his Vietnam War trilogy that began with The Basic Training of Pavlo Hummel and Sticks and Bones
, and a large silver ball in place of the usual museum bench. The effect was part funhouse, part hip club. On the show's opening night, the gallery was lit with strobes, recalling '80s installations in downtown hangouts like Area and the Palladium, with a nod to the landmark "Times Square Show" of 1981.

Koether's best paintings are those with turbulent fields of layered, translucent color embedded with figurative elements reminiscent of the visionary language of tarot tarot

Sets of cards used in fortune-telling and in certain card games. The origins of tarot cards are obscure; cards approximating their present form first appeared in Italy and France in the late 14th century.
 cards, and enmeshed en·mesh   also im·mesh
tr.v. en·meshed, en·mesh·ing, en·mesh·es
To entangle, involve, or catch in or as if in a mesh. See Synonyms at catch.
 in floating skeins of looping swirls that rhythmically cover the works' entire surfaces. People's Portrait, 2000, features a central white starburst StarBurst - An active DBMS from IBM Almaden Research Center.  studded with a pair of red ovals that read as disembodied alien eyes, super-imposed on a whirling, feathery spiral. Das Wunder, 1990, a boisterous red and yellow canvas in which hectic yet lyrical brushwork brush·work  
n.
1. Work done with a brush.

2. The manner in which a painter applies paint with a brush.


brushwork
Noun
 coexists with a multitude of transparent doodles Doodles can mean the following:
  • A doodle is an informal scribble or sketch.
  • Doodles is the former mascot of Chick-fil-A, replaced by the Eat Mor Chikin campaign in 1997.
  • Doodles Weaver was an American comedy actor.
 (some resembling faces), also features a superimposed su·per·im·pose  
tr.v. su·per·im·posed, su·per·im·pos·ing, su·per·im·pos·es
1. To lay or place (something) on or over something else.

2.
 text that betrays her predilection for inscriptions with a philosophical bent: DAS WUNDER, DAS WUNDER, IST WIE WIE Windows Internet Explorer
WIE With Immediate Effect (FAA)
WiE Winning Is Everything
WIE Wideband Interface Equipment
WIE Wireless Intellimouse Explorer
 IMMER (Wonder, Wonder Is Always Us) is written in huge, clumsy letters on the surface of the painting, affirming a sense of transcendental hopefulness. But the conceptual edginess Koether packs into her pictures is equally important.

While many of Koether's paintings are radiant and ecstatic, and come accessorized with spiritually uplifting texts or smiling faces (as in Antibody III [Passionate Power and Rules of Action], 1993), the artist refuses to deliver works that are too easily edifying, likeable, or beautiful. Like a true punk, she attacks with a vengeance the complacency that characterizes "new age" aesthetics. The scrambled syntax of the show's title, "I Is Had Gone," together with the shiny Mylar and cheap tinsel tin·sel  
n.
1. Very thin sheets, strips, or threads of a glittering material used as a decoration.

2. Something sparkling or showy but basically valueless: the tinsel of parties and promotional events.
, is symptomatic of the positive, disruptive power of the nonsensical elements that drive her art. Koether's work, which has never found a niche in the market but has earned her a huge cult following, has yet to receive the recognition it truly deserves; but its cumulative effect is powerful nonetheless. After twenty years of work, Koether is well on her way to becoming an "overnight sensation."
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Author:Avgikos, Jan
Publication:Artforum International
Date:Jun 22, 2005
Words:577
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