RANDALL DEIHL.CLARK GALLERY Along with Scott Prior and the late Gregory Gillespie, painter Randall Deihi has earned the moniker (1) A name, title or alias. See alias. (2) A COM object that is used to create instances of other objects. Monikers save programmers time when coding various types of COM-based functions such as linking one document to another (OLE). See COM and OLE. "Valley Realist" with his painstakingly detailed oil portraits and nostalgic, campy vignettes. Most of the twenty-nine still lifes, portraits, and landscapes recently on view capture the scenes and characters of Deihl's beloved Pioneer Valley in rural western Massachussetts. Quirky yet familiar images of old bottle collectors, wizened wiz·ened adj. Withered; wizen. wizened Adjective shrivelled, wrinkled, or dried up with age Adj. 1. farmers, and elderly couples in laundromats fill panels and canvases ranging in scale from eleven by ten inches to four by seven feet. Deihl is also fascinated by roadside kitsch: shingled trailers, pink plastic flamingos, garden Madonnas, "Frosty Joy" ice-cream stands, and giant fiberglass Indians along the Mohawk Trail. Working from snapshots and sketches, Deihl embellishes everyday reality with exaggerated scale, intensified lighting, and heightened colors worthy of Disney studios. He often includes figures and animals in juxtapositions that lend a romantic edge to lonely roadside scenes. The panoramic White Station, 1997, reveals a bleak geography: an abandoned gas station before fluorescent-green trees under a moonless sapphire night sky. The contours of the simple white-and-red Art Deco building are echoed by the boarded-up windows and two vintage gas pumps. Deihl adds a couple of narrative touches to this image of an American architectural vernacular: tire tracks and a lone black-and-white dog who stands in the shadows forlornly gazing into the distance. A sizable group of small panels attests to Deihl's mastery of portraiture. Closely observed sharp-focus images of the elderly, friends, and Deihl himself evoke the work of Otto Dix in their excruciating attention to detail and flaw. In Yellow Self Portrait, zooo, the artist gives a biting depiction of his own pensive pen·sive adj. 1. Deeply, often wistfully or dreamily thoughtful. 2. Suggestive or expressive of melancholy thoughtfulness. face, with piercing blue eyes and tan, wrinkled skin. The almost Flemish 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. and chiaroscuro chiaroscuro (kyärōsk `rō) [Ital.,=light and dark], term once applied to an early method of printing woodcuts from several blocks and also to works in black and white or monotone. of his head contrast with the flatly rendered lines of his red-and-blue V-necked shirt and the mustard yellow backgtound. Farmer, 2000, a tiny panel painting, depicts a shriveled shriv·el intr. & tr.v. shriv·eled or shriv·elled, shriv·el·ing or shriv·el·ling, shriv·els 1. To become or make shrunken and wrinkled, often by drying: and toothless farmer holding the top of a shovel. The contours of his craggy face and neck mimic the folds of his gray shirt and baseball cap. This native of the small Massachusetts town of Goshen is one of the relics that Deihl seeks to capture and preserve. In Portrait of Greg, 1999-2000, Deihl's late best friend sits in his Belchertown studio amid a still-life setup of fruit, canvases, brushes, and frames. The patterns of spilled paint on the floor around Gillespie echo those on the artist's pigment-stained clothing. In his canvas, Deihl has faithfully reproduced Gillespie's unfinished painting of a smiling woman leaning out of a frame and some handwritten hand·write tr.v. hand·wrote , hand·writ·ten , hand·writ·ing, hand·writes To write by hand. [Back-formation from handwritten.] Adj. 1. notations on the wall (the names and phone numbers of Deihl, Prior, and artist Jane Lund). Gillespie's furrowed, scowling scowl v. scowled, scowl·ing, scowls v.intr. To wrinkle or contract the brow as an expression of anger or disapproval. See Synonyms at frown. v.tr. face seems to display the selfreflective angst that often accompanied the realization of his art, perhaps hinting also at what seems in retrospect to be a darker contemplation: This studio is where Gillespie was to hang himself this past April, shortly after Deihl's painting was completed. Deihl adds candor and irony to an ephemeral world populated by spirited loners. In a manner hauntingly evocative of Grunt Wood and Edward Hopper, Deihi's carefully rendered vistas memorialize me·mo·ri·al·ize tr.v. me·mo·ri·al·ized, me·mo·ri·al·iz·ing, me·mo·ri·al·iz·es 1. To provide a memorial for; commemorate. 2. To present a memorial to; petition. an aging and vanishing America. |
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