Neil Jenney.WHITNEY MUSEUM OF AMERICAN ART Whitney Museum of American Art, in New York City, founded in 1930 by Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney. It was an outgrowth of the Whitney Studio (1914–18), the Whitney Studio Club (1918–28), and the Whitney Studio Galleries (1928–30). The six paintings selected for "Neil Jenney: Natural Rationalism" depict that mythic North American North American named after North America. North American blastomycosis see North American blastomycosis. North American cattle tick see boophilusannulatus. landscape of verdant ver·dant adj. 1. Green with vegetation; covered with green growth. 2. Green. 3. Lacking experience or sophistication; naive. forests, picturesque valleys, swollen rivers, and open skies. Recalling John Locke's proclamation that "in the beginning all the world was America," Jenney's paintings conjure the unspoiled frontier of the New World and the transcendental visions it inspired. Reminiscent of the works of the Hudson Valley and Luminist painters in particular, Jenny's paintings appropriate the epic proportions of sublime landscape painting, exaggerating the horizontal format in some works to such a degree that the painting's vertical dimension all but disappears. Framed in heavy-set, black moldings that lend them a museumlike gravity and titled in a blocky typeface that recalls 19th-century fire-engine or railroad-car numbers, Jenney's paintings reference the landscape tradition of the previous century in presentation as well as style. For all their references to this idyllic tradition, there remains something unequivocally disturbing about these works. This is due in part to the coexistence of Modernist painting styles and more traditional passages. While trees and grass are illustrated with acute precision, other details are abstracted into rhythmic patterns and broad, flat bands of color that recall the early works of Arthur Dove or Georgia O'Keeffe. In two of the paintings from the "North America Divided" series, 1990-94, clouds are rendered in regular rectangular patterns that owe more to Rothko than to meteorology. These irregularities create a dissonance that becomes hallucinatory hal·lu·ci·na·to·ry adj. 1. Of or characterized by hallucination. 2. Inducing or causing hallucination. where Jenney's "natural rationalism" gives way to visions of paradise lost. Something has gone awry in God's country "In God's Country" is the seventh track and fourth single from U2's 1987 album, The Joshua Tree. Bono has stated that he was initially writing about Ireland, but in the end it became about America. "In God's Country" was released as a single in Canada and the U.S. . No humans are visible, yet Jenney's paintings are suffused suf·fuse tr.v. suf·fused, suf·fus·ing, suf·fus·es To spread through or over, as with liquid, color, or light: "The sky above the roof is suffused with deep colors" with traces of human activity: the wide-open skies and broad vistas in such paintings as Acid Story, 1983-84, are not a vision of a vast untouched environment, but the result of defoliation from acid rain. In the modest-sized North America Divided, 1991, our view of the horizon at dusk is obstructed by a broken tree branch ensnared in a single strand of barbed wire barbed wire, wire composed of two zinc-coated steel strands twisted together and having barbs spaced regularly along them. The need for barbed wire arose in the 19th cent. and suspended in mid air. What first appears to be virgin wilderness is in effect a contemporary wasteland of crisscrossing barbed-wire fences and strip-mined valleys--a postindustrial post·in·dus·tri·al adj. Of or relating to a period in the development of an economy or nation in which the relative importance of manufacturing lessens and that of services, information, and research grows. Adj. 1. graveyard. Using an idiom that has traditionally registered our awe, Jenney's "natural rationalism" is in the tradition of moral landscape painting, asking us to recognize ourselves and our follies in the forms and patterns of nature. |
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