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Nicola Tyson: Friedrich Petzel Gallery.


Nicola Tyson's most recent show came with an epigraph, declaimed by the press release: "IMAGINATION I hold to be the living Power and prime Agent of all human Perception.... A repetition in the finite mind of the eternal act of creation in the infinite I AM." Thus Tyson's twelve new paintings, which purport to plumb the depths of "the imagination and the unconscious," were brought under the Romantic sign of the lines' author, Samuel Taylor Coleridge. This reference deftly marks out Tyson's ambitions here, but it's only the beginning of the hunt for her sources and stylistic influences. Ubiquitous in discussions of Tyson's "psycho-figuration" are litanies of her sundry appropriations. Here one might note an indebtedness to Francis Bacon's flayed subjects; there a self-conscious nod to Hans Bellmer's fetishistic dolls, or Hannah Hoch's riotous collages, or Egon Schiele's raw draftsmanship, or Cindy Sherman's constructions of malleable identities.

Tyson's paintings, which often resemble the results of a one-player game of cadavre exquis, admit to such pillagings without being delimited de·lim·it   also de·lim·i·tate
tr.v. de·lim·it·ed also de·lim·i·tat·ed, de·lim·it·ing also de·lim·i·tat·ing, de·lim·its also de·lim·i·tates
To establish the limits or boundaries of; demarcate.
 by them. The artist's Pop-surreal forms present bodies as libidinous li·bid·i·nous
adj.
Having or exhibiting lustful desires; lascivious.
 portents that only tenuously come together, like textbook illustrations of the mirror stage of infant development. As amalgams of allusion and technique they would strain under their own ponderousness were it not for Tyson's cheekily punchy colors (often forming near-monochromatic single- or double-hued grounds of unspecific Adj. 1. unspecific - not detailed or specific; "a broad rule"; "the broad outlines of the plan"; "felt an unspecific dread"
broad

general - applying to all or most members of a category or group; "the general public"; "general assistance"; "a general rule";
 place and allusion) and perverse genetic mutations. In such works as Full Length (all works 2005), a woman's anatomy is a campy, hyperbolically rotund form, mutating the convention of the full-length portrait into a topsy-turvy caricature. Others, such as Nude, torque physiognomy physiognomy /phys·i·og·no·my/ (fiz?e-og´nah-me)
1. determination of mental or moral character and qualities by the face.

2. the countenance, or face.

3.
 so fully as to render it abstract: a breastlike protrusion protrusion /pro·tru·sion/ (-troo´zhun)
1. extension beyond the usual limits, or above a plane surface.

2. the state of being thrust forward or laterally, as in masticatory movements of the mandible.
 might also be a chin, and the whole form a spindly, wafer-thin phallus phallus /phal·lus/ (fal´us) pl. phal´li  
1. penis.

2. a representation of the penis.

3. the primordium of the penis or clitoris that develops from the genital tubercle.
. Then there is Twist, a pliable wishbone wishbone

see furcula.
, legs swiveled and impossibly contorted and crowned by a hair-covered skull, a tangled mask obfuscating the figure's identity.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Tyson's are bodies not so much becoming animal--although there are signs of emergent wings (or are they breasts too?) in Pointers--but something alien or mineral (witness Landscape Contemplating Itself's craggy, headlike formations). They are often androgynous, as in Bearded Artist, which shows the "artist" in aggregate profile. A passage of deep blue paint covers the cheek while the merest suggestion of an eye gives way to dense brown fur, leaving the nose and forehead to decompose into permutations of acrid pink. The image suggests a kind of violence done to the form. Even so, it is unclear whether such veils might not be defensive in their covering, armoring as much as defacing that which they overlie o·ver·lie  
tr.v. o·ver·lay , o·ver·lain , o·ver·ly·ing, o·ver·lies
1. To lie over or on.

2. To suffocate (a baby, for example) by accidentally lying on top of it.
. As ciphers for projection and disavowal, Tyson's paintings raise specters of scopic desire together with autoeroticism autoeroticism /au·to·erot·i·cism/ (aw?to-e-rot´i-sizm) sexual self-gratification or arousal without the participation of another person.autoerot´ic , displacing and confounding the very term--much less the site--of otherness in the process.

Writing of his own dolls, Bellmer averred: "The anagram anagram [Gr.,=something read backward], rearrangement of the letters of a word or words to make another word or other words. A famous Latin anagram was an answer made out of a question asked by Pilate.  is the key to all my work." It followed that "the body is like a sentence that invites us to rearrange it." In Compulsive Beauty, Hal Foster suggests that Bellmer's shifting of desire thus "doubles back, turns in, as if to capture the object, to make, unmake, and remake its image again and again." At the risk of adding yet another source to Tyson's ever-spiraling constellation, this sure seems apt.
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Author:Hudson, Suzanne
Publication:Artforum International
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Mar 1, 2006
Words:540
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