Pia Fries: Galerie Mai 36.Pia Fries typically crosses broad, white grounds with thick brushstrokes, furrowing and altering the picture plane with blots, traces of drops, superimpositions, and washes, as if the canvas were once again the arena it was for classic gestural painting. The impression of spontaneity, however, is repeatedly undone under closer examination: At first barely notice-able, silk-screened photographs of applied paint emerge from the loose texture of the oil painting. Spot and brushstroke directly encounter their own reproductions. The authentic gesture of painting is replaced, almost indistinguishably, with its copy. The display of paint, its flow, and its thinning are expanded a level by a memory of painting, a recollection of the painted. The eruptions of paint, which in Fries's work have always run up against the external form, are, in these new paintings, further disturbed by images within the image. Collaging painting with itself through the use of printing processes, Fries elicits hybrid images whose illusionist passages take up the actual application of paint in stark relief. Here the art of painting is at once identical to and distanced from itself. In the broken temporality tem·po·ral·i·ty n. pl. tem·po·ral·i·ties 1. The condition of being temporal or bounded in time. 2. temporalities Temporal possessions, especially of the Church or clergy. Noun 1. of these images, the explosive moment of painterly paint·er·ly adj. 1. Of, relating to, or characteristic of a painter; artistic. 2. a. Having qualities unique to the art of painting. b. intervention remains frozen as the stasis stasis /sta·sis/ (sta´sis) 1. a stoppage or diminution of flow, as of blood or other body fluid. 2. a state of equilibrium among opposing forces. of the photographic reproduction. One could speak of dynamic rhythmic changes, of mute approaches and conflicts that result from the meandering of painting into photography and vice versa VICE VERSA. On the contrary; on opposite sides. , and of the permeation and detachment of finely related and shrilly contrasting traces of paint. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] In the series "Les Aquarelles de Leningrad," 2003, facsimile prints of eighteenth-century botanical and entomological en·to·mol·o·gy n. The scientific study of insects. en to·mo·log illustrations have been torn into fragments, then mounted on rough wooden boards and shaken with paint, as along a tectonic fault line. The figurative elements, the streaks of paint, and the rough wood background form a precarious unity beyond the modern distinctions of figuration fig·u·ra·tion n. 1. The act of forming something into a particular shape. 2. A shape, form, or outline. 3. The act of representing with figures. 4. A figurative representation. 5. and abstraction, figure and ground. Little moments of narrative begin only to break off again. The animals and plants against a neutral background recall possible landscapes, as they offer suddenly, in their burlesque burlesque (bûrlĕsk`) [Ital.,=mockery], form of entertainment differing from comedy or farce in that it achieves its effects through caricature, ridicule, and distortion. It differs from satire in that it is devoid of any ethical element. forms, myriad points of departure for gestural painting. Surprising intersections and transitions are likewise to be found. The illusionism illusionism, in art, a kind of visual trickery in which painted forms seem to be real. It is sometimes called trompe l'oeil [Fr.,=fool the eye]. The development of one-point perspective in the Renaissance advanced illusionist technique immeasurably. of the figurative representations runs up against the actuality of painting. Hung as they were here side by side in a row along the length of a wall, the "watercolors" appear in an inter-mediate state between print series and painterly singularity. Hybridity of form pertains not only to the individual images but also the status of the work as a whole. Found, newly painted, and documented traces blend within a single composition to form a different kind of original. Fries deploys strategies of sampling and loops in her work comparable to those familiar from digital music and imaging. And yet the starkly physical presence of the painting itself and its ground lends the fleeting reproductions of selected materials a very particular, vibrating vibrating, v using quivering hand motions made across the client's body for therapeutic purposes. permanence, as if a cluster of strong tones were never to fade away. --HRR Translated from German by Diana Reese. |
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