Michael Byron.In Michael Byron's recent exhibition, two candles, in the shape of life-sized busts cast in paraffin, each faced a series of elegant gray-on-black "drip" paintings. On these paintings, typographic collage translates each dribble and squiggle See tilde. into some psychological "moment"--"lust," "laziness," "substance abuse," "fate," "enlightenment," "inner peace." In a companion exhibition in Paris, Byron presented an installation entitled, Search(6): Le Tableau d'Amsterdam, 1992--93, which indicated that, as a whole, his new work is about translation: the translation of paint into language, of a squiggle into a signifier sig·ni·fi·er n. 1. One that signifies. 2. Linguistics A linguistic unit or pattern, such as a succession of speech sounds, written symbols, or gestures, that conveys meaning; a linguistic sign. , of an object into it representation. Byron's works linger like complicated, multitextured brain-teasers. Close in spirit to the light bulb drawn over a cartoon-figure's head, the candle-busts turn the Enlightenment's belief in subject-centered reason into a visual pun. Each entitled The Viewer, 1993, these busts underline Byron's examination of the relationship between the viewer and the work, of just how a squiggle in paint becomes something more: how a painting becomes personally expressive at the same time that it becomes a culturally significant statement. With his version of drip painting, Byron summons the ghost of Jackson Pollock (and, by association, the ghosts of the critics who recognized and elevated his work to cultural prominence). But the specific critical issues associated with Pollock's painting are evoked by Byron's series, entitled "Psychological Charts," 1993, in such a way as to call them into question. They're not Clement Greenberg riffs on the expressivity expressivity /ex·pres·siv·i·ty/ (eks?pres-siv´i-te) in genetics, the extent to which an inherited trait is manifested by an individual. of abstraction, rather, they make quite literal connections between each drip and particular, often fatuous, psychological states such as "fear of success," "bullshit," "vacuity va·cu·i·ty n. pl. vac·u·i·ties 1. Total absence of matter; emptiness. 2. An empty space; a vacuum. 3. Total lack of ideas; emptiness of mind. 4. ." In their careful "charting" of unconscious fears and desires onto specific daubs of paint, these paintings make a mockery of the supposedly instinctual in·stinc·tu·al adj. Of, relating to, or derived from instinct. See Synonyms at instinctive. in·stinc tu·al·ly adv. drives captured in Abstract Expressionist ex·pres·sion·ism n. A movement in the arts during the early part of the 20th century that emphasized subjective expression of the artist's inner experiences. ex·pres painting. What they fail to take into account is that their esthetic es·thet·ic adj. Variant of aesthetic. appeal derives in part from a way of looking shaped by that very tradition. Byron makes beautiful dribbles, and his sophisticated choice of brownishorange paint looks perfectly stunning against the black background and the gray drips: stare at them a while and you begin to think you're looking into deep space, at some strange galaxy where stars run together in streams--entering the space of the unconscious that these works are meant to close off or at least foreground as a hopelessly artificial conceit. You're brought back to earth, of course, by all those interfering funny words ("domestic chaos," "code of ethics Code of Ethics can refer to:
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tu·al·ly adv.
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