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Peter Hristoff.


DAVID David, in the Bible
David, d. c.970 B.C., king of ancient Israel (c.1010–970 B.C.), successor of Saul. The Book of First Samuel introduces him as the youngest of eight sons who is anointed king by Samuel to replace Saul, who had been deemed a failure.
 BEITZEL

In an era of fashionable murk murk also mirk  
n.
Partial or total darkness; gloom.

adj. Archaic
Partially or totally dark; gloomy.



[Middle English mirke, from Old Norse myrkr
 the incandescent tones of Peter Hristoff's latest paintings are like a defiant shout of joy or anger. I suspect that they may also be a protest against esthetic conformity, something for which this passionate and fastidious painter has never had much time. His gaze is fixed on things beyond the confines of the New York scene, and for that matter, beyond the Western tradition. To a Western observer, for example, the coiling, serpentine forms in Untitled (Red Landscape) |all works 1993~ and several other paintings might seem to resemble intestines, but they may also be related to the stylized styl·ize  
tr.v. styl·ized, styl·iz·ing, styl·iz·es
1. To restrict or make conform to a particular style.

2. To represent conventionally; conventionalize.
 cloud-shapes that Turkish ceramicists borrowed from China via Persia. The work of this Istanbul-born, New York resident of Bulgarian extraction is, in fact, far more Turkish than that of most contemporary Turkish painters (who are determined to appear as Western as possible). The brilliant Uskudar, for example, is named for one of Istanbul's Asiatic suburbs, and its highly formal--if asymmetrical--design of overlapping, vertical and horizontal oblongs includes many collaged elements, among them the Turkish flag, arabesques of Kufic script, even a kitsch photograph of the sun setting behind the Blue Mosque. The whole painting, like the closely related Prayer, could be seen as an abstract analysis of a sunset (the colors are predominantly red, yellow, orange, gold, and blue) or as a Cubist reconfiguration of an Anatolian kilim kilim

Pileless floor covering handwoven by tapestry techniques in Anatolia, the Balkans, and parts of Iran. The name is also given to a variety of brocaded, embroidered, warp-faced, and other flat-woven rugs and bags.
. Whereas Uskudar and Prayer evoke the patterns of tiles and textiles, other paintings move closer to the figurative. There are clear elements of landscape and skyscape skyscape
a view or representation of the sky, especially in a painting, photograph, etc.
See also: Representation
, but they are all assembled with a dreamlike unpredictability and fluidity. Weep, for example, is a tall, stratified stratified /strat·i·fied/ (strat´i-fid) formed or arranged in layers.

strat·i·fied
adj.
Arranged in the form of layers or strata.
 panel in which frothy, blue-white clouds lie below forms like the silhouettes of red mountain ranges. In Wait(Perfect Air), swirling areas of blue and white can be read as sky and clouds, or pools surrounded by ice and snow. In Triumph, a white, flowering tree seems to spring out of mid air. Even among these more organic forms Hristoff's love of geometry is not effaced: his characteristic oblongs hang like banners amid the cloud or water shapes, or, as in The Sky Swallows Us Whole, they take on the properties of architectural elements in Byzantine frescoes. The same painting includes the tiny figure of a crouching imp or demon, and an acrobat of some kind rides a horse across the lower edge of Wait. These miniscule min·is·cule  
adj.
Variant of minuscule.

Adj. 1. miniscule - very small; "a minuscule kitchen"; "a minuscule amount of rain fell"
minuscule
 figures are enigmatic but purposeful. They introduce a distinct note of Symbolism into Hristoff's work. Here everything exists for itself, and yet, at the same time, is symbol, shadow, and allusion. Taking a leaf from Rimbaud's book, Hristoff might have called this show Les Illuminations: the colors suggest stained glass or enamels; the intricate and meticulous craftsmanship seems positively late Medieval. In the current, dispirited dis·pir·it·ed  
adj.
Affected or marked by low spirits; dejected. See Synonyms at depressed.



dis·pirit·ed·ly adv.

Adj.
 artistic climate, it is heartening heart·en  
tr.v. heart·ened, heart·en·ing, heart·ens
To give strength, courage, or hope to; encourage. See Synonyms at encourage.

Adj. 1.
 to discover a young painter of such fervor, who is in the process of evolving a wholly original vocabulary of forms. John Ash
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Title Annotation:David Beitzel gallery, New York, New York
Author:Ash, John
Publication:Artforum International
Date:Feb 1, 1994
Words:499
Previous Article:Alphonse Borysewicz. (Yoshii Gallery, New York, New York)
Next Article:Stephanie Rose. (E.M. Donahue Gallery, New York, New York)
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