Milena Dragicevic: Ibid Projects.Two or three things I know about Milena Dragicevic: She's Serbian by birth, raised in Canada, and London based. She's a twin, and her paintings have previously applied the no-doubt-peculiar feeling of observing something that looks like you but isn't to the post-Communist East and West. A couple of years ago she made a few too many canvases that diagrammed fashionable nostalgia: Soviet-era modernist architecture floating over color fields or striped backdrops that resembled '60s American abstraction at its Clem-pleasing zenith of flatness. But she had a sideline in cleverly composed portraits of doppelgangers and fractured selves, spiced with Eastern European references (big, sweptback swept·back adj. 1. Angled rearward from the points of attachment. Used especially of aircraft wings. 2. Having wings of this type. Used of an aircraft. Adj. 1. hairstyles; accordions) that tested how much tension, contradiction, and illogic il·log·ic n. A lack of logic. Noun 1. illogic - invalid or incorrect reasoning illogicality, illogicalness, inconsequence one could pack into a painting. This is evidently what she's now focusing on--while seeing how much cultural baggage The term cultural baggage refers to the tendency for one's culture to pervade thinking, speech, and behavior without one being aware of this pervasion. Cultural baggage becomes a factor when a person from one culture encounters a person from another, and unconscious she can jettison jettison (jĕt`əsən, –zən) [O.Fr.,=throwing], in maritime law, casting all or part of a ship's cargo overboard to lighten the vessel or to meet some danger, such as fire. before the whole enterprise floats into the clouds. In Forma (all works 2005), a brunet stands before a three-part abstraction--deepest brown diagonally bisected by midnight blue, itself punctured from the left by a sharp green triangle. This might be a schematic nocturnal landscape or an abstract painting our man is obscuring or simply a bit of buffeting design. Whichever, it echoes his pose; or he echoes it. His eyes--one brown, one blue--and the green-string cat's cradle he's holding (which, aping abstraction with folksy folk·sy adj. folk·si·er, folk·si·est Informal 1. Simple and unpretentious in behavior. 2. Characterized by informality and affability: a friendly, folksy town. 3. means, creates its own echoing set of triangles) sit parallel with the green section's upper edge. Similarly aligned with the brown region are his outstretched out·stretch tr.v. out·stretched, out·stretch·ing, out·stretch·es To stretch out; extend. outstretched Adjective arms, which probably aren't actually his: His green-brown shirt's sleeves seem folded behind his back; the forearms--sheathed in red sleeves--emerge from under them, as if someone were standing behind him, performing a magic trick. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] You can think a lot about what this man is doing and where he might be from; Dragicevic is very good at making it look as if she's telling only half of a story. Ditto in Falsifikacija #2, in which a blonde and her tan, even blonder twin each tie an ambiguous object (half visor, half fake beard) around their chins. The women are separated from each other by a wooden frame; their bodies are cut off at the waist, as if they'd pulled off a conjuring trick or been punished for attempting disguise. The background, subdivided into differently colored segments, resolves itself into another backward-looking abstraction. Connecting these elements in a semicoherent way isn't impossible, but, as in There Is No Gardener, and He Is Invisible--an artfully composed pileup featuring a garden shed propped up by an ugly sculpture, drunken topiary topiary Art of training living trees and shrubs into artificial, decorative shapes. Topiary is known to have been practiced in the 1st century AD. The earliest topiary was probably the simple development of edgings, cones, columns, and spires to accent a garden scene. on an orange lawn, and a pair of hands reaching out blindly for two bright-colored balls that might have fallen off another '60s painting--eventually you may feel there's no code to crack, just a roundabout of sly connotation con·no·ta·tion n. 1. The act or process of connoting. 2. a. An idea or meaning suggested by or associated with a word or thing: . So what do you want: An artist who sees painting as a kind of Leyden jar Leyden jar (lī`dən), form of capacitor invented at the Univ. of Leiden in the 18th cent. It consists of a narrow-necked glass jar coated over part of its inner and outer surfaces with conductive metal foil; a conducting rod or wire passes wherein levels of reality and conflicting leitmotifs--nostalgia, disguise, and paralysis, for example--collide like hot electrons and who intends the ensuing energy as evocative of the fraught (re)construction of personal and collective identity? Or her meaner twin, one who racks up stimulating, enigmatic details and significant-looking rhymes only to kick you upstairs without supper? That's the gauntlet gauntlet /gaunt·let/ (gawnt´let) a bandage covering the hand and fingers like a glove. Dragicevic throws down. The best one can say right now is that leaving it on the ground rarely feels like an option. |
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