KIM FISHER.CHINA ART OBJECTS The allure of the monochromatic monochromatic /mono·chro·mat·ic/ (-kro-mat´ik) 1. existing in or having only one color. 2. pertaining to or affected by monochromatic vision. 3. staining with only one dye at a time. . Well, yes, of course, it's like the wish to say something so completely that the entire continent of saying can be left forever. And these big red paintings, marked with a kind of insignia or logo (also in red, though one is partly white) pushed at times to the edge of the field or centering it grandly, all on sumptuous brown linen, would appear to be an attempt at finitude fin·i·tude n. The quality or condition of being finite. Noun 1. finitude - the quality of being finite boundedness, finiteness , an attempt to bring together the specificity and thrill of the now (as embodied by fashion) and the lush severity and awe of Great Painting. To put it bluntly: Kim Fisher ponders whether the beautiful can be joined with the sublime, a big no-no for Kant and others. The coordinates Fisher has set up for herself are Ad Reinhardt Adolph Dietrich Friedrich Reinhardt ("Ad" Reinhardt) (December 24, 1913–August 30, 1967) was a painter, writer, and pioneer of conceptual and minimal art. He was also a critic of abstract expressionism. , Robert Ryman, Stephen Prina, and (even if almost every piece has the logo initials AC of Andre Courreges) Prada. The caring attention to color, the subtlest gradations within and between works from, say, lipstick to cherry-tomato red, built up in an almost lacquerlike application of oil paint, points to Reinhardt; the luxe luxe n. 1. The condition of being elegantly sumptuous. 2. Something luxurious; a luxury. [French, luxury, from Latin luxus. texture of the linen support, the insignias that wrap around the front of the canvas to the side, nod to Ryman; the abstraction of the logo's typeface recalls Prina; the sexy oomph of it all, along with the cachet cachet /ca·chet/ (ka-sha´) a disk-shaped wafer or capsule enclosing a dose of medicine. ca·chet n. An edible wafer capsule used for enclosing an unpleasant-tasting drug. of hue, engages Prada (the red tag of its sport line). Even if the paintings are not always entirely successful, Fisher's project--her consideration of certain art-historical models and her attempt to personalize the monochrome--is just much more prepossessing pre·pos·sess·ing adj. 1. Serving to impress favorably; pleasing: a prepossessing appearance. 2. Archaic Causing prejudice. than so many other LA painters of her generation, who often produce things that look like illustrations from Wallpaper. Contemplating Fisher's work, you feel h er straggle strag·gle intr.v. strag·gled, strag·gling, strag·gles 1. To stray or fall behind. 2. To proceed or spread out in a scattered or irregular group. n. to do something that may take many years to accomplish, if it can ever be accomplished at all. There is much to investigate in the system Fisher has established. For example, does she really need the Courreges reference, which seems a bit more obscure than it has to be, as if it were some kind of code? A pursuit of pure abstraction using a draftsman's tool like a French curve might have done more--forcing her to achieve the go-go electricity she's after by some other means, perhaps as her work's affect rather than its subject. The "A" and "C" work better in the smaller Study for where the logo is abstracted to the point of absolute form because it has been practically abandoned rather than broken up into parts, resembling not letters but specific yet unidentifiable Adj. 1. unidentifiable - impossible to identify identifiable - capable of being identified patterns. One wonders whether a greater play of scale might make Fisher question how to get the amazing matte effect of her large paintings into an equally intense but compact canvas. She also might think more about just what the relation is between her large paintings and her sculptural installation: six stacks of elegant, space-y helmets, all white except for two in canary yellow, based on a strange hat design by Pierre Cardin. Why is it that the fashion reference works better here than in the paintings, and yet the paintings remain much more engaging and complicated than the sculpture? But I could stare at the edge between the red paint and the dreamy brown linen for days. And that edge, extreme and vulnerable, is almost an allegory for her enterprise: to find a way to keep something vital between matters that have the potential to deaden dead·en v. dead·ened, dead·en·ing, dead·ens v.tr. 1. To render less intense, sensitive, or vigorous: one another, i.e., fashion/art, paint/support, history/now, personality/anonymity. Fisher is in search of a place--an edge--from which to resist and exceed the status quo [Latin, The existing state of things at any given date.] Status quo ante bellum means the state of things before the war. The status quo to be preserved by a preliminary injunction is the last actual, peaceable, uncontested status which preceded the pending controversy. of how these supposed oppositions are understood. |
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