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Nancy Evans.


SUE SPAID FINE ART

There are several independent painters working in L.A. who do strange things an don't give a rat's ass about the worldwide hit parade. Or if they do, the parad never went around their block and they learned to live without it. This isn't t say that these painters are unambitious, it's just that they have better things to do than look over their shoulders for applause and cuddles, winking knowingl at last year's model and throwing fits about their new-and-improvedness. They'r more into freaky freak·y  
adj. freak·i·er, freak·i·est
1. Strange or unusual; freakish.

2. Slang Frightening.



freak
 problems in the studio, the weirdness of making marks, colors and surfaces, the intoxicating in·tox·i·cate  
v. in·tox·i·cat·ed, in·tox·i·cat·ing, in·tox·i·cates

v.tr.
1. To stupefy or excite by the action of a chemical substance such as alcohol.

2.
 language of their medium.

Nancy Evans is most definitely one of them--a great L.A. secret. Evans has mastered a peculiar kind of normal painting. She's made a pile of work that seems horribly conventional and dead at first glance but is in fact very beautiful, and does what so many great paintings do--confuse the crap out of you, spaz spaz or spazz   Offensive Slang
n. pl. spazz·es
One who is considered clumsy or inept.

intr.v. spazzed, spazz·ing, spazz·es
To be clumsy or inept.
 your eyes out and make your glands get all Pavlovian. The paintings g from cheerfulness to black-holey abandonment. As time wears on, her backgrounds pull out and leer, and eventually get architectural, crucifixy, and biomorphic. At least that's the case with Flicker (all works 1993-94), in which firey-orang and yellow lava sticks line up in an orderly ceremonial formation on a matte-black surface, so luscious and soft it looks like chocolate graham crackers. The orderly grids house or hold up the colors, discipline the loose, gorey underpainting In art, an underpainting is an initial layer of paint applied to a ground, which serves as a base for subsequent layers of paint. Underpaintings are often monochromatic and help to define colour values for later painting. , keep them in check in a funny way. Other paintings have marks like Rorschach blots and lead one down revealing paths of psycho yak-yak.

In Foulard fou·lard  
n.
1. A lightweight twill or plain-woven fabric of silk or silk and cotton, usually having a small printed design.

2. An article of clothing, especially a necktie or scarf, made of this fabric.
, Evans makes the impossible work--the aberration--a green painting. Floating on the surface or field of a dirty, dingy mint-green are grody oval clusters. The green surface is rubbed down in spots to reveal a whitish ribbing in the center and a darkened dark·en  
v. dark·ened, dark·en·ing, dark·ens

v.tr.
1.
a. To make dark or darker.

b. To give a darker hue to.

2. To fill with sadness; make gloomy.

3.
 back on all four sides, which adds a remarkable amount of depth on top of which she throws watery black stains. Inside each egg shape is a batiklike pattern of reds, browns, whites, and blue-grays that appears to be set on a natural course of cell division, or of quiet optical insanity. In still other paintings, her lush eerie underpainting and abrasions, drippy drip·py  
adj. drip·pi·er, drip·pi·est
1. Characterized by dripping; drizzly: a drippy, wet day.

2. Slang
a. Tiresome or annoying.

b.
 curdle cur·dle  
v. cur·dled, cur·dling, cur·dles

v.intr.
1.
a. To change into curd. See Synonyms at coagulate.

b.
 marks, solid reds, or blue-and-white checks reek of an admirably willful practice of abstract gesture characterized by a fresh, unpredictable grace.

Even her ridiculous moves are worthwhile and semiamazing, like her plastic, waterfilled, candy-colored stanchions. These rinky-dink playthings, placed in front of every painting like circus props, bracket or protect or just add a little something extra, and are as glamorous and useful as car alarms that play the theme to the Godfather. They are disarming, comic, and genuine, which is to say, very cool.
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No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
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Title Annotation:Sue Spaid Fine Art, Los Angeles, California
Author:Weissman, Benjamin
Publication:Artforum International
Date:Sep 1, 1994
Words:467
Previous Article:Jason Rhoades. (Rosamund Felsen Gallery, Los Angeles, California)
Next Article:Karen Finley. (Kim Light Gallery, Los Angeles, California)
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