Kevin Appel: Angles Gallery.What is "pictorial" space? Modernist criticism put the question near the top of its agenda but never provided a definitive answer, preferring instead to blur its theoretical parameters in a way that might enable a more integrated solution. As it stands, the term is somewhat paradoxical: On one band, it refers to something flat, coextensive co·ex·ten·sive adj. Having the same limits, boundaries, or scope. co ex·ten with painting's literal surface. On the other, it signifies depth, though not in a traditional perspectival sense. Rather, "depth" here implies a plastic intelligence, and an ability to articulate flatness as such, and thereby to render it open and inhabitable. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] This imperative has guided Kevin Appel's output from the start, though he approaches it now in a manner that might be termed retrospective, even revisionist re·vi·sion·ism n. 1. Advocacy of the revision of an accepted, usually long-standing view, theory, or doctrine, especially a revision of historical events and movements. 2. . His work features elements of architecture and "good design"--that is, precisely those disciplines that modern art cast as its Other. Moreover, the pictorial space of his paintings has always alluded to space "out there": dwellings real or imagined, typically echoing the streamlined, open-plan configurations of Rudolf Schindler and Richard Neutra. Accordingly, from one show to the next, Appel's aesthetic evolution has unfolded as a series of quasi-representational renovations and remodelings. A wall removed here, a ceiling raised there--formal decisions that, by recourse to an actual architectonics ar·chi·tec·ton·ics n. (used with a sing. verb) 1. The science of architecture. 2. Structural design: the architectonics of a fugue. 3. , gain immediate phenomenological implications. But whereas the sense of being literally housed was figuratively invoked by Appel's earlier works, this recent batch completely reverses the program, presenting spaces that are impossible anywhere but here on the canvas. If they have any material referent left, it is only to Appel's collages, several of which were also included. These are made of interlocked cuttings of textured papers, suggestive of suggestive of Decision making adjective Referring to a pattern by LM or imaging, that the interpreter associates with a particular–usually malignant lesion. See Aunt Millie approach, Defensive medicine. wood grain and masonry like the papiers colles so beloved by the Cubists, all seemingly held together by a series of slackly dangling, ropelike pencil lines. In the paintings, these textures reappear as 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. passages that occupy sharply delimited de·lim·it also de·lim·i·tate tr.v. de·lim·it·ed also de·lim·i·tat·ed, de·lim·it·ing also de·lim·i·tat·ing, de·lim·its also de·lim·i·tates To establish the limits or boundaries of; demarcate. planes of varying thickness. Appel applies his patented approximation of bas-relief, but this effect is no longer tied to any outlying cause. He gives us architectonic ar·chi·tec·ton·ic also ar·chi·tec·ton·i·cal adj. 1. Of or relating to architecture or design. 2. Having qualities, such as design and structure, that are characteristic of architecture: structure but no longer a view. Instead, painterly surface is rendered as an inter-zone in which our sense of inside and outside becomes convulsively con·vul·sive adj. 1. Marked by or having the nature of convulsions. 2. Having or producing convulsions. con·vul skewed skewed curve of a usually unimodal distribution with one tail drawn out more than the other and the median will lie above or below the mean. skewed Epidemiology adjective Referring to an asymmetrical distribution of a population or of data . Those branches that typically intrude on the frame of an architectural representation as a cliched cli·chéd also cliched adj. Having become stale or commonplace through overuse; hackneyed: "In the States, it might seem a little clichéd; in Paris, it seems fresh and original" reminder of the "great outdoors" are elevated to a principal role in Appel's work, twisting and turning their way through windows and doors, penetrating the interior in an almost obscene manner. Yet the highly romantic impression that nature is exacting revenge on the manmade is tempered by the primitive form of housing that Appel has chosen to depict. These are primal structures--simultaneously recalling a child's drawing of home and the architecture of the American frontier, they are themselves still partly "of nature." Their iconic, four-sided pitched roofs are evidently supported by the very same wood that elsewhere undermines structural soundness. Architecture, caught in this moment of simultaneous becoming and dissolution, is subject to the same forces of push and pull that have always defined the pictorial, but now in a way that bears directly upon our sense of being whole or fragmented, secure or vulnerable, civilized or barbaric. |
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