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Lecia Dole-Recio: Richard Telles Fine Art.


In her third solo exhibition at Richard Telles Fine Art--six new works, all Untitled, 2005--Lecia Dole-Recio has aggressively built upon the foundations she laid down four years ago at the same gallery. The smallest of them, about a foot square, is unquestionably the most straightforward of Dole-Recio's works to date and served as the show's cornerstone. A collage of relentless diagonal strips of red and black paper, which are slightly at odds with a canted grid of squares cut from and returned to the surface, it suggests the propulsive dynamism--and palette--of El Lissitzky's "Prouns" but might also be put to good use as a No Wave album cover. It's a good example of the way in which Dole-Recio reconfigures the DNA DNA: see nucleic acid.
DNA
 or deoxyribonucleic acid

One of two types of nucleic acid (the other is RNA); a complex organic compound found in all living cells and many viruses. It is the chemical substance of genes.
 strands of modernism, emphasizing the "new" in "renewal."

The diagonal, as a building block of isometric isometric /iso·met·ric/ (-met´rik) maintaining, or pertaining to, the same measure of length; of equal dimensions.

i·so·met·ric
adj.
1.
 spatial plasticity, structures every work in the show. All are constructed from combinations of paper, cardboard, vellum vellum: see parchment. , glue, and tape intertwined with pencil drawing and painterly gouache gouache (gwäsh): see watercolor painting.
gouache

Opaque watercolour. Also known as poster paint, designer's colour, and body colour, it differs from transparent watercolour in that the pigments are bound by liquid glue, which is
 passages in how-dare-she color assemblies of, among others, gray, red, salmon pink, purple, pumpkin, and tangerine tangerine: see orange.
tangerine

Small, thin-skinned variety of the mandarin orange species (Citrus reticulata deliciosa) of the rue family (citrus family).
. Reviewing Dole-Recio's first solo exhibition in these pages, Bruce Hainley noted that "part of her project is a downshift down·shift  
v. down·shift·ed, down·shift·ing, down·shifts

v.intr.
1. To shift a motor vehicle into a lower gear.

2. To reduce the speed, rate, or intensity of something.

3.
 in the acceleration of vision." While the works here are still marked by an intricacy in·tri·ca·cy  
n. pl. in·tri·ca·cies
1. The condition or quality of being intricate; complexity.

2. Something intricate: the intricacies of a census form.

Noun 1.
 that demands sustained, patient looking, this deceleration deceleration /de·cel·er·a·tion/ (de-sel?er-a´shun) decrease in rate or speed.

early deceleration
 is also complicated by Dole-Recio's strategic new use of the diagonal (which, as any graphic designer will tell you, speeds up vision). The paradox seems intentional: Just as her overlapping grids and folding planes induce a vertiginous ver·tig·i·nous
adj.
1. Affected by vertigo; dizzy.

2. Tending to produce vertigo.


vertiginous adjective Related to vertigo, dizzy
 sense of space, the diagonal allows Dole-Recio to make good on the implications of progressing at multiple speeds simultaneously.

Confident enough to cross boundaries into painting and sculpture, yet modest enough to stand as works on paper, Dole-Recio's larger efforts realize the full potential of their scale (unlike, say, Julie Mehretu's slick, overinflated drawings-cum-paintings that fizzle out when seen from a distance). Here one was required to stand far away from both of the big works--the largest of which measures roughly eight by seven feet--in order to digest their orchestration of color and structure, as well as to apprehend evidence of a process that in some ways resembles film editing, cutting-and-splicing these temporal labyrinths into being.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Close up, one can easily get lost in Dole-Recio's rich detail: More than a few moments recall the tender but transcendent figure/ground/shadow play--and material efficiency--found in the humblest shallow relief works of Richard Tuttle. But whereas Tuttle positions his work in tension with the architectural space of the gallery, Dole-Recio's post-punk Prouns primarily rely on the context of their own complex pictorial infrastructure. That said, individual works played well off one another here, and the entire show had a sense of vibrant continuity. It is obvious that the artist had fun, surprising herself in order to surprise the viewer. Pleasure becomes an economy, with Dole-Recio affording nearly as much to the viewer as she receives herself.
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Author:Holte, Michael Ned
Publication:Artforum International
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Feb 1, 2006
Words:494
Previous Article:Rachel Lachowicz: Patricia Sweetow Gallery.
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