Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,678,741 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Richard Wright. (Reviews: Dusseldorf).


KUNSTVEREIN

Richard Wright Noun 1. Richard Wright - United States writer whose work is concerned with the oppression of African Americans (1908-1960)
Wright
 is fascinated by what he calls the "ghosts" of painting's history. The idiosyncrasies of a Guston or an Ensor, for instance, place them in awkward relation to tradition and prompt challenging questions as to painting's potential. Wright's own wall drawings, destined des·tine  
tr.v. des·tined, des·tin·ing, des·tines
1. To determine beforehand; preordain: a foolish scheme destined to fail; a film destined to become a classic.

2.
 to live only briefly before being obliterated o·blit·er·ate  
tr.v. o·blit·er·at·ed, o·blit·er·at·ing, o·blit·er·ates
1. To do away with completely so as to leave no trace. See Synonyms at abolish.

2.
 by the next layer of white emulsion, pose equivalent difficulties. This show's three seemingly familiar elements--an architectural interior, a landscape, and a text fragment (a borrowed song title)--set up a subtle dialogue between the delicacy and restraint of the works and the architecture and history of the space, but it took time to grasp.

The Kunstverein is very plain: an elongated e·lon·gate  
tr. & intr.v. e·lon·gat·ed, e·lon·gat·ing, e·lon·gates
To make or grow longer.

adj. or elongated
1. Made longer; extended.

2. Having more length than width; slender.
 rectangle with light entering through pitched skylights. At the back of it Wright drew, starting from the floor, alternating rows of squares and parallelograms up the wall. Diminishing in size as they ascended, these elements formed a pattern suggesting a grand staircase (If you're looking for the similarly named structure on the RMS Titanic, see Grand Staircase of the Titanic)''

The Grand Staircase is an immense sequence of sedimentary rock layers that stretch south from Bryce Canyon National Park through Zion National
 rendered in classic single-point perspective. They thus formed a displaced continuation of the broad flight of steps Noun 1. flight of steps - a stairway (set of steps) between one floor or landing and the next
flight of stairs, flight

staircase, stairway - a way of access (upward and downward) consisting of a set of steps
 by which one had reached the gallery. Seen close up, the illusionistic steps rose steeply, but as you moved away they appeared to flatten out Verb 1. flatten out - become flat or flatter; "The landscape flattened"
flatten

change form, change shape, deform - assume a different shape or form

splat - flatten on impact; "The snowballs splatted on the trees"
, and from the far end of the gallery it seemed that the floor merely continued up a gentle slope beyond the room's confines. Opposite this predominantly red drawing, Wright painted a rectangular area with closely spaced blue horizontal lines. There was something disarmingly simple about this, offering as it did all the inevitable cliches and inescapable truisms of painting. Marks on a surface both obscure the surface and reiterate its presence, and when, as in this instance, they present the image of a veil, they are doubly split in their task of hiding and revealing. The marks simultaneously held the viewer's gaze within the space and, in a manner quite different from the window-on-the-world trope trope  
n.
1. A figure of speech using words in nonliteral ways, such as a metaphor.

2. A word or phrase interpolated as an embellishment in the sung parts of certain medieval liturgies.
 of the staircase drawing, led it out beyond the wall to the Rhine and the sky above it. The area of blue, moreover, was punctuated by a fairly regular series of circular "holes" whose pattern hinted at the structure of the concrete sections forming the building's facade, the other side of the wall. One of the holes, ringed in black, was larger than the others and for those with a little local knowledge was a reminder of the occasion in 1981 on which Joseph Beuys drilled through the wall of the adjacent Kunsthalle for real.

The third element of the show provided something like a commentary on the work's various layers--pattern, image, observation, memory, and sensation--and on the emotional and intellectual resonance of their interconnections. Dotted around the roof beams were gold Gothic letters, which together spelled out the words BASTARD IN LOVE, the title of an old Black Flag song. The song contains the lines, "You keep waiting for the love you wanna wan·na  
Informal
1. Contraction of want to: You wanna go now?

2. Contraction of want a: You wanna slice of pie? 
 feel / But you never believe it when they tell you love is real," and it was this endless dichotomy between desire and fulfillment that the show worried at. Here as elsewhere Wright's provisional solution was to point us gently toward our experience of the concrete realities of the space. After all, it was the architecture that physically contained the contrasting styles of the drawings and held them together. Where else to look for a reconciliation of their disparate historical reference points, incommensurable in·com·men·su·ra·ble  
adj.
1.
a. Impossible to measure or compare.

b. Lacking a common quality on which to make a comparison.

2. Mathematics
a.
 theoretical underpinnings, and divergent pictorial rhetorics, if n ot here and in this moment?
COPYRIGHT 2002 Artforum International Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2002, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Author:Archer, Michael
Publication:Artforum International
Geographic Code:4EUGE
Date:Dec 1, 2002
Words:572
Previous Article:Alexej Koschkarow. (Reviews: Cologne).
Next Article:Nedko Solakov. (Reviews: Berlin).
Topics:



Related Articles
Iron City.
Richard Wright: A Collection of Critical Essays.
The Critical Response to Richard Wright.
The Black Atlantic: Modernity and Double Consciousness.
On Gwendolyn Brooks: Reliant Contemplation.
Richard Wright bench. (between the lines).(Brief Article)
Richard Wright's Lawd Today! And the political uses of modernism.
Call-and-response: tracing the ideological shifts of Richard Wright through his correspondence with friends and fellow literati.
Pledging allegiance to the imagination: Wright was a political activist, but his loyalty was to his art.(CULTURE)(author Richard Wright)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles