Mitja Tusek.GALERIE BRUGES LA MORTE Mitja Tusek's paintings are based on the principles of addition and multiplication, in which the final image is clearly both the result and the effacement effacement /ef·face·ment/ (e-fas´ment) the obliteration of features; said of the cervix during labor when it is so changed that only the external os remains. of all of its constituent parts. Using beeswax beeswax: see wax. beeswax Commercially useful wax secreted by worker honeybees to make the cell walls of the honeycomb. A bee consumes an estimated 6–10 lbs (3–4. that has been tinted tint n. 1. A shade of a color, especially a pale or delicate variation. 2. A gradation of a color made by adding white to it to lessen its saturation. 3. A slight coloration; a tinge. 4. with different pigments, Tusek constructs these works as a series of layers, each one covering and extending the previous one. In some cases, there are up to fifty layers on the canvas, producing an image in which depth and flatness seem to exist in equal parts. All of the paintings are stretched on wood and are shown without frames--an important point, since, examining the sides of the works, one can see not only the thin layers of paint, but also some of the colors that have bled out of these layers. In some cases, these colors seem to have completely disappeared from the painting's surface, as is the case in a large screen and a black abstract painting (all works 1993). Yet, to say that the colors red and purple are absent from the final result is misleading, for each and every layer leaves a trace on the succeeding ones, whether they are "evident" in the end result or not. Tusek goes back and forth, between abstract and figurative fig·u·ra·tive adj. 1. a. Based on or making use of figures of speech; metaphorical: figurative language. b. Containing many figures of speech; ornate. 2. works, and this exhibition makes clear their commonality com·mon·al·i·ty n. pl. com·mon·al·i·ties 1. a. The possession, along with another or others, of a certain attribute or set of attributes: a political movement's commonality of purpose. with the work of a painter like Gerhard Richter Gerhard Richter (born February 9, 1932) is a prominent German artist. Richter is considered by some critics as one of the most important German artists of the post-World War II period and is also one of the world's most expensive, with his paintings often selling for several . In Richter's case, though, the negation NEGATION. Denial. Two negations are construed to mean one affirmation. Dig. 50, 16, 137. of sharp focus relates directly to photography and to the (in)ability of the artist to fix an image. With Tusek, the lack of definition in the figurative paintings relates to the materials used, as well as to the physical process of repeating the same image with the application of each different layer. The repetition serves to push the object of representation into a deeper space, foregrounding the effort that is involved in reproducing it. For Richter, the lack of clarity is an end product. For Tusek, it is a gradual result of his refinement, through the use of the copy, of a primary image. Two other paintings in the exhibition, one a forest scene, the other a kind of closeup or detail of it, use oil on canvas as if to contradict the accumulated effects of the wax paintings. The former works are like throwaways, dashed off in a series of gestures and strokes that emphasize the idea of process as an immediate rather than an attenuated Attenuated Alive but weakened; an attenuated microorganism can no longer produce disease. Mentioned in: Tuberculin Skin Test attenuated having undergone a process of attenuation. activity. Different in almost every conceivable way from the wax paintings, these works are, in a sense, another layer of meaning that the artist superimposes on his own work. Regardless of the materials involved, each painting points to the trace, the evidence of the physical act of painting, as an activity that is both immediate and infinite. The power of Tusek's paintings rests in the way they imply these two states, without ever making them contradictory. Michael Tarantino |
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