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Max Protetch. (Reviews).


DAVID REED

No beds, no videos. Here we got David Reed without any of his recent quasi installations. Instead, the six big new abstract paintings served up basics--Reed's slithering slith·er  
v. slith·ered, slith·er·ing, slith·ers

v.intr.
1. To glide or slide like a reptile. See Synonyms at slide.

2. To walk with a sliding or shuffling gait.

3.
 painterly paint·er·ly  
adj.
1. Of, relating to, or characteristic of a painter; artistic.

2.
a. Having qualities unique to the art of painting.

b.
 gesturalism, complemented by deft variations of format and palette, and the occasional comic grace note. Appearing in the lower right-hand corner of #483, 2001-2002, for instance, is a luscious vermilion vermilion, vivid red pigment of durable quality. It is a chemical compound of mercury and sulfur and is known as red sulfide of mercury; it was formerly obtained by grinding pure cinnabar but is now commonly prepared synthetically.  brushstroke that bears a distinct resemblance to the old tongue-lapping Rolling Stones logo. The effect: a teasing, impudent im·pu·dent  
adj.
1. Characterized by offensive boldness; insolent or impertinent. See Synonyms at shameless.

2. Obsolete Immodest.
 sign-off.

Moments like these felt ingratiating in·gra·ti·at·ing  
adj.
1. Pleasing; agreeable: "Reading requires an effort.... Print is not as ingratiating as television" Robert MacNeil.

2.
, but the show as a whole highlighted what I take to be Reed's default mode, a kind of nervous, compositional trickiness. The paintings were full of coy croppings and erasures, areas where spontaneously painted contours were repeated with mechanical precision (the "live" brushstroke and its zombie doppelganger doppelgänger Psychiatry A delusion that a double of a person or place exists elsewhere; it is related to other defects in recognition and suggests organic disease in the nondominant parietal lobe. See Depersonalization disorder, Schizophrenia. ). Of course, Reed never lets the labor show--the surfaces are uniformly sleek. Nevertheless, you sense the enormous concealed effort, the sanding and manicuring that leaves these paintings looking so determinedly quirky.

It probably didn't help that Reed's show coincided with solos by Brice Marden and Sue Williams at Matthew Marks Gallery and 303 Gallery, respectively. The result was a triple bill of "squeegee" painters: three eminent artists working in a mode that descends from the sinuous sinuous /sin·u·ous/ (sin´u-us) bending in and out; winding.

sinuous

bending in and out; winding.
, air hockeyish gestures of late de Kooning. Comparisons were inevitable, and after Marden's spartan assurance and Williams's libidinous li·bid·i·nous
adj.
Having or exhibiting lustful desires; lascivious.
 brashness, Reed came across looking a little bit like an overtalker.

What is there to be nervous about? The obvious answer, which cleaves Reed fans from skeptics, is that he's a one-trick pony. If you don't like Reed, it's because his paintings seem to deploy a fundamentally generic kind of imagery. Nobody could deny that those paint loops are sexy or that he is spectacularly resourceful at varying them. But the way Reed corrals his gesturalism is seldom as interesting as the whorls themselves, and the very energy of his efforts hints at desperation.

In Reed's favor, all painters should be so lucky to have such problems. The achievement of his gesturalism is no small feat--because it's loaded with affect, with an exhilarating euphoria that is unmistakably its own brand of thrill. Reed's may be the most basic painterliness ever. As much kinetic and tactile as visual, it summons memories of sponging, sudsing, and finger painting, of the primal side-to-side, forward-and-back motions that our hands make moving across a surface.

When Reed individuates this urpainterliness, not just embellishes it with clever formal riffs, the difference is obvious. That happened only once in this show, in the painting #482, 2001-2002, in which Reed's subsidiary motif, parallel color bands, finally wrestled its way toward a kind of parity. The result was a welcome hit of simplicity and freshness, and a painting that reads as a formalist slapfight: Two kinds of motif (geometric and painterly) overlap then reoverlap. It was as if Reed were thematizing his own desire to have it both ways, to be both unruly and calculating, action painter and Minimalist. Was it an accident that #482 also carried a weird echo of Reed's recent extracurricular diversions? The parallel bands suggest video-screen color bars but also, and more improbably, a striped blanket and matching pillowcase pil·low·case  
n.
A removable covering for a pillow. Also called pillowslip.


pillowcase or pillowslip
Noun

a removable washable cover for a pillow

Noun 1.
. In this painting, Reed really seems to be having it all--humor and gravitas grav·i·tas  
n.
1. Substance; weightiness: a frivolous biography that lacks the gravitas of its subject.

2.
, improvisation and cunning, even the beds and videos.
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Title Annotation:David Reed
Author:Worth, Alexi
Publication:Artforum International
Date:Oct 1, 2002
Words:550
Previous Article:Adrian Piper.
Next Article:The Project. (Reviews).
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