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MARIA MARTINEZ-CANAS.


Maria Martinez-Canas often derives the layered, complex imagery of her photographs from old maps, customs documents, and other items relating to relating to relate prepconcernant

relating to relate prepbezüglich +gen, mit Bezug auf +acc 
 her Cuban heritage. However, in "Traces of Nature," her most recent show, the inspiration came not from her memories of Cuba but from her own backyard: On view were photograms--shadowlike images produced by plating objects between light-sensitive paper and a light source--made with plants, leaves, and other organic forms taken from the Miami-based artist's garden. Used since World War II in the creation of maps, the photogram pho·to·gram  
n.
1. An image produced without a camera by placing an object on photosensitive paper and exposing it to light.

2. A photograph.
 has also been a favorite mode of experimentation among art photographers, including Man Ray, Christian Schad Christian Schad (August 21, 1894 in Miesbach, Oberbayern - February 25, 1982) was a German painter associated with the New Objectivity movement. Life
Schad studied at the art academy in Munich.
, and (perhaps most important for Martinez-Canas, who was trained in Bauhaus-influenced Chicago) Laszlo Moholy-Nagy.

The artist presented the large series from 1999 that gave the show its title, along with two smaller ones, "Metamorfosis," and "Garden," both 1998. The latter pair comprised toned gelatin-silver prints of fourteen by eleven inches, although the "Metamorfosis" images carried a little more blue, while the "Garden" series read more warmly as brown. The works in "Traces of Nature" are diazo di·az·o  
adj.
Relating to or containing a pair of bonded nitrogen atoms, one of which is also bonded to an aromatic hydrocarbon.

Adj. 1. diazo - relating to or containing diazonium
 prints, the results of a blueprinting process that is typically used to make charts and architectural renderings Architectural rendering, or architectural illustration, is the art of creating two-dimensional images showing the attributes of a proposed architectural design. Traditional rendering techniques are taught in a "master class" practice (such as the École des Beaux-Arts), where . Mounted on unstretched canvas, the most notable of these was Markings, which at seventy-one by eighty-two inches was by far the largest piece in the show.

Both in technique and subject matter, Martinez-Canas's works recall nineteenth-century botanical prints, traditionally made using the photogram method and printed in blue-green ink. Her images are much more abstract, however. These large compositions alternately evoke an undersea world and a geometrical arrangement of specimens in silhouette. Yet they seem less like images of nature than codes or signs that indicate the presence of nature. Subtle variations in tone create a delicate sfumato sfu·ma·to  
n.
The blurring or softening of sharp outlines in painting by subtle and gradual blending of one tone into another.



[Italian, from past participle of sfumare, to evaporate, fade out
 around the silhouetted objects, suggesting that they exist not just on the flattened flat·ten  
v. flat·tened, flat·ten·ing, flat·tens

v.tr.
1. To make flat or flatter.

2. To knock down; lay low: The boxer was flattened with one punch.
 surface of the paper but in a foglike atmosphere. As a result, the works seem to hover between two and three dimensions, implying a tension between nature and abstraction, between the object and its representation.

Through her use of the photogram, Martinez-Canas connects herself both to modernist innovators like Moholy-Nagy and to an older legacy of naturalists transcribing plant life for analytical purposes. Still, she seems less intent on joining either tradition than in testing the boundaries of the medium, particularly in the creation of large-scale art that would not be read, at first glance, as photography. The use of blueprint paper in particular has resulted in large works of austere and innovative beauty that transform natural objects into mysterious shadow forms of strong graphic presence and indeterminate That which is uncertain or not particularly designated.


INDETERMINATE. That which is uncertain or not particularly designated; as, if I sell you one hundred bushels of wheat, without stating what wheat. 1 Bouv. Inst. n. 950.
 meaning.

--Justin Spring
COPYRIGHT 1999 Artforum International Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1999, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:photographs, Julie Saul Gallery, New York City, New York
Author:Spring, Justin
Publication:Artforum International
Geographic Code:1U2NY
Date:Nov 1, 1999
Words:439
Previous Article:MICHAEL SMITH AND JOSHUA WHITE.(installation, New Museum of Contemporary Art, New York City, New York)
Next Article:JEAN-LUC GODARD.(video recordings, Swiss Institute, New York City, New York)(Review)
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