Richard Artschwager: Gagosian Gallery.The fourteen new paintings in Richard Artschwager's recent exhibition at Gagosian Gallery hardly comprise a series or even suggest a cohesive totality. Rather, a number of overlapping connections held the show together as Artschwager recycled from his archival treasure trove TREASURE TROVE. Found treasure. 2. This name is given to such money or coin, gold, silver, plate, or bullion, which having been hidden or concealed in the earth or other private place, so long that its owner is unknown, has been discovered by accident. , often redeploying materials and motifs as sly sight gags and perceptual bluffs. In several works, for example, the artist borrows objects from his 1974 "Door Window Table Basket Mirror Rug" series, relocating the drawings' woven basket into a distorted and slightly creepy dungeonlike interior in Walking Man, and isolating the "old" rug in a perceptual tug-of-war between flatness and perspectival depth in Rug II (both 2004). With the past clearly visible in his rearview mirror, Artschwager has arrived at several pictorial strategies that seem colorful, varied, weird, and wholly new. Since the mid-1960s, Artschwager has built most of his image-based works--depictions of plain American houses, modern apartment buildings, opulent interiors, and, more recently, uneasy "political" portraits of George W. Bush, Osama bin Laden Osama bin Laden: see bin Laden, Osama. , and Timothy McVeigh--on inky photographs clipped from newspapers. Transcribing these images into acrylic paintings on panels of Celotex--a compressed paper pulp used in the manufacture of ceiling tiles--the grisaille grisaille (grĭzī`, –zāl`, Fr. grēzä`yə), a monochrome painting and drawing technique executed in tones of gray. pictures reproduce the smudgy smudge v. smudged, smudg·ing, smudg·es v.tr. 1. To make dirty, especially in one small area. 2. To smear or blur (something). 3. , pulpy, slightly out-of-focus character of their sources, and are twice-distanced from the "reality" indexed therein. In recent years, Artschwager has replaced the off-the-shelf panels with custom-made fiber versions; likewise, in this show, he eschews the comfortable familiarity of his previous source material in favor of peculiar imagery with less readily identifiable origins. The fuzzy surface of the fiber becomes a variable that Artschwager repeatedly manipulates in the service of purposeful ambiguity: In the dryly painted (and dryly humorous) Desert Growth, 2005, piles of modular forms on a mesa suggest, all at once, alien succulents, new urban development in the American Southwest, formal abstraction overtaking the landscape, and a still life of geometric vessels on a table. In Abstract and Close-It (both 2004), striated striated /stri·at·ed/ (stri´at-ed) having stripes or striae. striate, striated having streaks or striae, e.g. striate retinopathy. striate border see brush border. and knotted lines resembling strands of rhubarb rhubarb: see buckwheat. rhubarb Any of several species of the genus Rheum (family Polygonaceae), especially R. rhaponticum (or R. rhabarbarum), a hardy perennial grown for its large, succulent, edible leafstalks. cleverly insinuate in·sin·u·ate v. in·sin·u·at·ed, in·sin·u·at·ing, in·sin·u·ates v.tr. 1. To introduce or otherwise convey (a thought, for example) gradually and insidiously. See Synonyms at suggest. 2. a microscopic close-up of the support. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Increasingly removed from any relationship to Minimalism minimalism, schools of contemporary art and music, with their origins in the 1960s, that have emphasized simplicity and objectivity. Minimalism in the Visual Arts or Pop--categories that never quite fit in the first place--Artschwager has quietly positioned himself as Rene Magritte's American heir, however unfashionable a move that might sound. Like the recalcitrant Surrealist's greatest pictorial conundrums, many of Artschwager's pictures--resized southwestern landscapes; oddly squashed or distended distended Medtalk Enlarged, bloated. Cf Nondistended. interiors populated by enigmatic, anonymous figures and "furniture" that recalls this artist's earlier sculptures; coyly representative "abstractions"--refuse resolution or easy interpretation. In fact, Holding, 2004, clearly pays homage to Magritte, and implies infinite regress, via an image of a thin peasant girl holding a picture of herself. More successful is the two-faced vertical "portrait" painting Janus, 2005, in which a 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. desert plant rendered in creamy yellow, pink, and acid green also reveals itself as a brushy gestural head contained by a thick, cartoonish black outline; the ambiguous gender of the featureless head mirrors the playful disruption of genre expectations engendered by conflating portrait and landscape. Throughout his career, Artschwager has confounded categorical limits and plotted his own trajectory, all the while making the visual comprehension of space--and the everyday objects that occupy it--strangely unfamiliar. Well into the fifth decade of his career, the artist has finally emerged as the eccentric he's supposed to be. Fittingly, then, these oddball pictures are totally unexpected, yet unmistakably his own. |
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