Les Rogers: Leo Koenig, Inc.What happens to the artist-model relationship when the model isn't there? The subject of seven new works by Les Rogers is a photogenic photogenic /pho·to·gen·ic/ (-jen´ik) 1. produced by light, as photogenic epilepsy. 2. producing or emitting light. pho·to·gen·ic adj. 1. eighteen-year-old girl from Austin, Texas, named Lindsey, who Rogers did not meet until after the portraits were complete. He made her acquaintance through the networking website MySpace and painted from the photographs she posted there. One does wonder what a man pushing forty was doing on a website whose average user is two decades younger, but this electronic connection yielded no Law and Order fodder--just a suite of large, whimsically decent paintings. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] The stylistic divagation di·va·gate intr.v. di·va·gat·ed, di·va·gat·ing, di·va·gates 1. To wander or drift about. 2. To ramble; digress. that has marked Rogers's previous work persisted at Leo Koenig, Inc., with Lindsey pictured in various grades of Photorealist coherence and neo-expressionist abstraction. In some works her digital self-portraits seem to have been transposed more or less directly, while in others the artist departs from his model in delirious flights of nonrepresentational non·rep·re·sen·ta·tion·al adj. Of, relating to, or being a style of art in which natural objects are not represented realistically; nonobjective. fancy. Picasso is the not-so-hidden influence here--he's mentioned in the first sentence of the press release, and the violin neck and cleaved cleaved (klevd) split or separated, as by cutting. head in The Secret Goldfish, 2006, are too imitative to be construed as anything other than flattery--but Rogers has also cribbed liberally from Willem de Kooning, both early (disembodied facial features) and late (lithe painterly swoops), as well as Sigmar Polke (patterned overlays) and Alex Katz (broad planes of flesh). This formal mishmash mish·mash n. A collection or mixture of unrelated things; a hodgepodge. [Middle English misse-masche, probably reduplication of mash, soft mixture; see mash. nicely suits the upheavals of adolescent subjectivity, and Rogers's shifts keep pace with Lindsey's self-conscious self-fashioning. Her doe-eyed vacancy is the only constant here, as she dons a succession of track jackets and ironic T-shirts and experiments with different looks for her calculatedly messy hair. The series is punctuated by some winsome win·some adj. Charming, often in a childlike or naive way. [Middle English winsum, from Old English wynsum : from wynn, joy; see wen-1 pictorial flourishes, particularly the biomorphic colored blooms erupting on Lindsey's cheek in Jungleland, 2006, and the slow congealing of her face, in slender chalklike lines, from the choked abstraction of Faint, 2006. Predictably, however, Rogers lacks the technical facility of the artists to whom he alludes, and some of his effects--the overwrought drippy drip·py adj. drip·pi·er, drip·pi·est 1. Characterized by dripping; drizzly: a drippy, wet day. 2. Slang a. Tiresome or annoying. b. runoff in Letter to, 2006, the academic modeling in Bang Bang, 2006--feel labored. Yet it's also possible to read this stilted quality as the artist's meditation on the incursions of the digital on the practice of painting, and as such the show made its own small contribution to the discourse around medium in contemporary practice; something is definitively lost, Rogers seems to say, in cross-pollinations between painting, photography, and the Web. This comment on the current state of painting is matched in interest by Rogers's take on the current state of American adolescence. Despite the works' range and size, we come away knowing little about Lindsey; in one of the most effective pictures here, Gah ..., 2006, her face is half covered by choppy bangs and oversized sunglasses, and her mouth is stretched in an impenetrable expression that could be a bored yawn or a chipper chipper Drug slang An occasional user of illicit drugs. See Recreational drug use Tobacco A popular term for a person who smokes < 5 cigarettes/day, who may be resistant to nicotine dependence or addiction, and often born to non-smoking parents. bursting-into-song. For all of the emotional openness that personal Web pages and blogging seem to have sponsored, teenagers remain as elusive as ever, their performative per·for·ma·tive adj. Relating to or being an utterance that peforms an act or creates a state of affairs by the fact of its being uttered under appropriate or conventional circumstances, as a justice of the peace uttering poses attesting more to obfuscation ob·fus·cate tr.v. ob·fus·cat·ed, ob·fus·cat·ing, ob·fus·cates 1. To make so confused or opaque as to be difficult to perceive or understand: "A great effort was made . . . than transparency. One thing was revealed at Rogers's opening, however: His virtual muse showed up from Texas. With her parents. |
|
||||||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion