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Magnus von Plessen: Art Institute of Chicago.


This modest overview of twelve paintings executed by Magnus von Plessen since 1999 was a thoughtful reinvestigation of traditional easel painting and an unexpectedly intense reinvigoration of genres and emphases sometimes considered exhausted. Portraiture portraiture, the art of representing the physical or psychological likeness of a real or imaginary individual. The principal portrait media are painting, drawing, sculpture, and photography. From earliest times the portrait has been considered a means to immortality. , allegory, still life, anecdotal figure painting, architectural studies, and even equestrian imagery were investigated anew--not in a mocking or dismissive manner, but rather as still-potent types, the collective weight of which it now seems impossible for a contemporary painter to transcend or otherwise escape.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

The uncomfortable sense of the familiar rendered strange--of a language once intuitively understood now spoken in curiously oblique tones--seems at the heart of von Plessen's enterprise. In Selbstportrat mit fremdem Kopf (Self-Portrait with Someone Else's Head), 2004, he seems to echo the portraiture of Manet and Courbet, yet the title signals his occupation of a realm made suddenly vulnerable. Von Plessen's manner of painting, however, does not undercut the assurance of a man comfortable in his skin and surroundings, sturdy and foursquare, attentively leafing through his mail or a book. His handling is superb: largely monochromatic monochromatic /mono·chro·mat·ic/ (-kro-mat´ik)
1. existing in or having only one color.

2. pertaining to or affected by monochromatic vision.

3. staining with only one dye at a time.
 parallel vertical and horizontal strokes of similar heft, often overlapping slightly and occasionally interrupted by smaller areas of shorter, staccato-like diagonal strokes and miniscule min·is·cule  
adj.
Variant of minuscule.

Adj. 1. miniscule - very small; "a minuscule kitchen"; "a minuscule amount of rain fell"
minuscule
 sprinkles of more intense color.

Von Plessen both applies paint and removes it, often scraping his wet canvases so hard that an imprint of the stretcher stretcher /stretch·er/ (strech´er) a contrivance for carrying the sick or wounded.

stretch·er
n.
 beneath is visible. But his disciplined manipulation of surface is nonetheless characterized by great nuance. The slightest bit of extra pressure from the artist's hand alters a painting's mood, and his strokes' physical similarity prompts close examination of the subtle differences between them. His technique is just descriptive enough to secure his subject matter, to function as both surface and substance.

Von Plessen's work is usually stern and humorless, so when he indulges in a bit of the erotics of seeing, as he does in the modest Pflanze (Plant), 2004, the moment is one to be savored. A lighter palette of scraped greenish grays provides the backdrop for a deconstructed image of a flower in a vase. Von Plessen literally separates the elements of the plant, making the creamy bloom and its lozenge lozenge /loz·enge/ (loz´enj) [Fr.]
1. troche; a discoid-shaped, solid, medicinal preparation for solution in the mouth, consisting of an active ingredient incorporated in a suitably flavored base.

2.
 of dirt hover above their blue and white container. The physical fissure fissure /fis·sure/ (fish´er)
1. any cleft or groove, normal or otherwise, especially a deep fold in the cerebral cortex involving its entire thickness.

2. a fault in the enamel surface of a tooth.
 is accompanied by a conceptual one; the sense is one of representation as somehow both inevitable and impossible, of the weight of history making the depictive process one to be wary of, even in the midst Adv. 1. in the midst - the middle or central part or point; "in the midst of the forest"; "could he walk out in the midst of his piece?"
midmost
 of its undertaking. There's something disarming disarming

removal of the crown of the canine teeth in primates. Includes denervation of the pulp cavity.
 about such a position; it is that of an uneasy heir examining an inheritance that may neither be ignored nor fully claimed.
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Author:Yood, James
Publication:Artforum International
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Sep 1, 2005
Words:435
Previous Article:Michael Borremans: Cleveland Museum of Art.
Next Article:Alec Soth: Minneapolis Institute of Arts.
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