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Lucia Nogueira: the Drawing Room at Tannery Arts.


Lucia Nogueira's quietly confident drawings occupy the twilight in which reality loosens its hold on the everyday. Many appear to be straightforward experiments in color incorporating elements of Nogueira's sculptures: gray test tubes, a funnel framed by a smooth ocher ocher (ō`kər), mixture of varying proportions of iron oxide and clay, used as a pigment. It occurs naturally as yellow ocher (yellow or yellow-brown in color), the iron oxide being limonite, or as red ocher, the iron oxide being hematite.  brushstroke, a row of colored lines, abstract scribbles, or an ink-soaked page with a thick drip of enamel near its top. As a result, the works' occasional strangeness takes you by surprise. One column of five yellow blobs has a cartoonish helicopter landing at its top (Untitled, 1995); elsewhere, pearly teeth loom out of the darkness (Untitled, 1991); and in a gloriously macabre example, what look at first glance like mangled tulips turn out to be animal heads atop flower stems (Untitled, 1998).

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

This is the first exhibition to concentrate on Nogueira's drawings, which she produced in the hundreds alongside the sculptures for which she was better known, and they amount to a significant body of work. Whereas in her sculptures the Brazilian-born, London-based artist drew out the repressed re·pressed
adj.
Being subjected to or characterized by repression.
 violence of everyday objects like electric ceiling fans or mechanical toys, her works on paper are subtler, even whimsical. Four cats sitting with their backs turned have crosses in place of heads (Untitled, 1989); buttons with a bluish blu·ish also blue·ish  
adj.
Somewhat blue.



bluish·ness n.
 tinge could double as faces (Untitled, 1998). Their colors are crepuscular crepuscular

active at twilight or just before dawn; said of animals or birds.
, dingy or faded; the cats have a brackish tinge, and in some drawings the entire paper has been steeped in ink or watercolor, giving them a dark, crusty depth. A line of plus and equal signs across one of the ink-soaked pieces of paper looks like a rendering of the stations of the cross Stations of the Cross

depictions of episodes of Christ’s death. [Christianity: Brewer Dictionary, 1035]

See : Passion of Christ
, lending the work instant gravitas grav·i·tas  
n.
1. Substance; weightiness: a frivolous biography that lacks the gravitas of its subject.

2.
 (Untitled, 1992), but the marks are made in correction tape, which has begun to flake off. This impermanence im·per·ma·nent  
adj.
Not lasting or durable; not permanent.



im·perma·nence, im·per
 nods to a subtly feminine language, one Nogueira shares with other female artists whose drawings explore that strange space where the mundane morphs into the unreal. Teeth suspended midpage along a liquid red line bring to mind Jay De Feo; scribbly abstractions recall Unica Zurn; and button-faces filling an entire page in rows echo Yayoi Kusama.

However, a work on newspaper Nogueira made a few weeks before her untimely death in 1998, and marking a possible departure from her mostly figurative 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.
, best articulates the precariousness of everyday life: A big blue pool of ink sweeps across the top right corner of a page torn from The Guardian, partially obscuring a photo of a ballet dancer. The blue washes against the red spotlight on the stage. Held in tension, it is at once part of the newsprint and apart from it.

Our own gaze upon the everyday is made strange by Nogueira's calm exploration of this in-between space. In her film Smoke, 1996, based on a site-specific 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
 work presented at Berwickupon-Tweed, a black bench looks out across the sea, and we hear the sound of kites flapping in the wind. Black pigeons fly through the air, their flight echoed by black kites. One of the kites is manipulated by an old man who looks like he's performing some hyperpassionate tai chi moves. The string is barely visible, and you only see the kite's shadow, but it doesn't matter--what's more important is the outline of the man's body against the sky and the graceful language he creates with his gestures.
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Article Details
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Author:Mears, Emily Speers
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Critical Essay
Geographic Code:4EUUK
Date:Oct 1, 2005
Words:557
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