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Monique Prieto: Cheim & Read.


WALKING BOTH FORWARDS AND BACKWARDS. This phrase, which appears in one of eight new canvases exhibited recently by Los Angeles-based painter Monique Prieto at Cheim & Read, neatly encapsulates the artist's current project. A longtime inhabitant INHABITANT. One who has his domicil in a place is an inhabitant of that place; one who has an actual fixed residence in a place.
     2. A mere intention to remove to a place will not make a man an inhabitant of such place, although as a sign of such intention he
 of the interzone between allusion and depiction, Prieto has lately begun using words in an attempt to further her experimental dialogue between past, present, and future modes of address. In making the work for which she has become known over the past ten years, Prieto has often used a computer as a preparatory tool to generate idiosyncratic id·i·o·syn·cra·sy  
n. pl. id·i·o·syn·cra·sies
1. A structural or behavioral characteristic peculiar to an individual or group.

2. A physiological or temperamental peculiarity.

3.
 compositions that oscillate To swing back and forth between the minimum and maximum values. An oscillation is one cycle, typically one complete wave in an alternating frequency.  between latter-day biomorphism Biomorphism is an art movement that began in the 20th century.

The term was first used in 1936, by Alfred H. Barr, Jr. Biomorphist art focuses on the power of natural life and uses organic shapes, with shapeless and vaguely spherical hints of the forms of biology.
 and a more self-contained, purely abstract vision. Now, in order to keep things fresh, she has turned to seventeenth-century diarist di·a·rist  
n.
A person who keeps a diary.


diarist
Noun

a person who writes a diary that is subsequently published

Noun 1.
 Samuel Pepys (1633-1703) for inspiration.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

WITH THE GREATEST LIBERTY AND LOVE. Pepys's words, rendered by Prieto in cartoonlike letters of wildly varying size that tumble across roiling fields of color, reflect both the turbulent richness of the famous Londoner's life and times and the enduring, universal nature of his personal and political insights. Prieto gives each letter a ramshackle solidity, as if it were hastily assembled from homemade Lego bricks. The effect--a self-aware but uncynical naivete reminiscent of late Philip Guston--is endearingly rough-and-ready, but this is not to say that the paintings aren't skillfully assembled. On the contrary, Prieto's facility for animating flat surfaces with opaque but effervescent ef·fer·vesce  
intr.v. ef·fer·vesced, ef·fer·vesc·ing, ef·fer·vesc·es
1. To emit small bubbles of gas, as a carbonated or fermenting liquid.

2. To escape from a liquid as bubbles; bubble up.

3.
 shades of magenta and lilac, buttercup buttercup or crowfoot, common name for the Ranunculaceae, a family of chiefly annual or perennial herbs of cool regions of the Northern Hemisphere.  and rose, sky blue and sea green, is immediately striking and an uncomplicated pleasure. In liberty and love (all works 2005), for example, letters rendered in black outline surrounding unprimed canvas are edged by irregular halos of orange, yellow, purple, and gray as they hover over a flat pink ground.

THE TIDE BEING AGAINST US WHEN WE WERE ALMOST THROUGH. As Artforum reviewer Christopher Miles points out in an essay accompanying the show, Pepys's life was hardly a simple one. While his journals famously document calamitous ca·lam·i·tous  
adj.
Causing or involving calamity; disastrous.



ca·lami·tous·ly adv.
 events including the Great Plague and the Great Fire of London Great Fire of London

(September 2–5, 1666) Worst fire in London's history. It destroyed a large part of the city, including most of the civic buildings, St. Paul's Cathedral, 87 parish churches, and about 13,000 houses.
, they stop before his two Tower of London Tower of London, ancient fortress in London, England, just east of the City and on the north bank of the Thames, covering about 13 acres (5.3 hectares). Now used mainly as a museum, it was a royal residence in the Middle Ages.  imprisonments and his role as confidant to two kings. (Pepys ceased writing in 1669 due to problems with his vision.) Tide and we broke up (the full text of which, THEN WE BROKE UP, is rendered against an appropriately downcast drool of blue and brown) remind us that public disaster and personal trials are inevitably forever intertwined. Pepys's gift, to which Prieto pays homage, was to make both into equally compelling subjects.

OUR EYES LOOKING IN PARALLEL LYNES. While most of the Pepys quotations that Prieto has chosen could conceivably have been written yesterday, a couple, our eyes and my owne jealousy, are dated by archaic spellings. The small variations are not immediately apparent, as the changing scale and eccentric fracturing of each "lyne" (they are rarely parallel) slows reading to a meander. But once the slight differences of orthography are identified and understood, they add both historical resonance (one that incidentally recalls Ed Ruscha's 17th Century, 1988) and a subtle linguistic music to the work.

ALL NIGHT VERY PLEASANTLY AND AT EASE. But if Prieto's project is a fitting tribute to a great cultural figure of the past, it has even greater value as a tribute to an ongoing creative tradition of immersion in the present moment--and also as a measure of painting's own resilience. Thus a choice of source material that might at first seem arbitrary ultimately represents a choice that is both informed and instinctive, and thus doubly relevant. In bells, the text THE BELLS RANG EVERYWHERE peals across a swirling, psychedelic backdrop that echoes its celebratory air and, along with all night, gives an already-affirmative show a positively joyful lift.
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Article Details
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Author:Wilson, Michael
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Critical Essay
Geographic Code:1U2NY
Date:Nov 1, 2005
Words:613
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