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Robert Ryman.


MUSEUM OF MODERN ART

It's all in the name--the stubborn consistency of tact, vision, and method, the economy of means, the paradoxically antisystematic system of repetitions, the governing law of tautology tautology

In logic, a statement that cannot be denied without inconsistency. Thus, “All bachelors are either male or not male” is held to assert, with regard to anything whatsoever that is a bachelor, that it is male or it is not male.
. Moving through over thirty years of Robert Ryman's production in this show was akin to taking the same commuter train over and over again but never having the same experience twice--and never actually reaching a destination. This work thumbs its nose at the protocol of formal progression articulated in Modernist rhetoric while simultaneously beckoning the viewer to perform a thorough "formal" analysis.

The putative simplicity of Ryman's work is deceptive, and this is precisely what enthralls. Unlike Donald Judd This article or section may contain original research or unverified claims.

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, who eventually rejected painting in favor of sculpture's literalness, Ryman has apparently delighted in the exhaustion of abstract painting. Nothing and everything changes in this artist's oeuvre, and one is struck by the sheer obstinance of his will to drive painting into a corner, allowing it to occupy that space with a quiet, mundane grace.

There's a poetics of blankness here that defies a congruous con·gru·ous  
adj.
1. Corresponding in character or kind; appropriate or harmonious.

2. Mathematics Congruent.



[From Latin congruus, from congruere,
 articulation in the verbal realm. Indeed, this is the main paradox that Ryman himself confronted early on, with works such as The Paradoxical Absolute, 1958, and other paintings from that period in which he uses his name and the date as a compositional element within an essentially abstract antispace. These suggest the frustration of an attempt to reconcile the naming function of language with the zero degree of nonobjective visuality. Evidently, this dilemma can find no actual resolution, since it is only a constructed, discursive paradox that has been rehearsed over and over again.

Is it still necessary to ask the same question of Ryman's work: does his painting indicate the final "end point" of the Modernist narrative? In his 1981 essay "Ryman's Tact," Yve-Alain Bois Yve-Alain Bois (born 1952) is an historian and critic of modern art. Yve-Alain Bois was born on April 16, 1952 in Constantine, Algeria. Academic Activities
In a formative early experience, he rejected Michel Seuphor's mis-characterization of Piet Mondrian as a kind of
 poses what still must be considered the most pertinent question regarding this artist: "Why is it so hard to write about Robert Ryman's work?" Ryman's paintings set a visual and ideological trap for the critic: what you see is what you get (jargon) What You See Is What You Get - (WYSIWYG) /wiz'ee-wig/ Describes a user interface for a document preparation system under which changes are represented by displaying a more-or-less accurate image of the way the document will finally appear, e.g. when printed. , and what you get is pro foundly what you see. Faced with Ryman's richly ascetic sensibility, the writer feels compelled to fill in the whiteness of these paintings' imaginary voids even if this means descending into the treacherous nether regions of metaphorical or metaphysical language.

Pushing back the limits of pictorial space, destroying pictorial 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. , destroying space itself, obliterating 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.
 depiction, signaling the tautology of practice through a syntax of repeated tactics, issuing forth gesture as the index of bodily presence, offering repetition as the most sensual strategy possible. Tautology heaped upon tautology, laying waste to meaning beyond the painting-as-thing. Painting as the sensuous science, a perceptual cancellation that only prompts speculation--a fecund fe·cund
adj.
Capable of producing offspring; fertile.
 emptiness. Do these paintings really speak to us at all? And how do we speak for them? Ryman's work is straightforwardly there--present--in its ineluctable yet understated materiality MATERIALITY. That which is important; that which is not merely of form but of substance.
     2. When a bill for discovery has been filed, for example, the defendant must answer every material fact which is charged in the bill, and the test in these cases seems to
. They are both prior to and beyond thought, an exhaustion that is finally inexhaustible-perhaps a poetry born of boredom.

Joshua Decter
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Title Annotation:Museum of Modern Art, New York, New York
Author:Decter, Joshua
Publication:Artforum International
Date:Feb 1, 1994
Words:503
Previous Article:John Duff. (McKee Gallery, New York, New York)
Next Article:Robert Longo. (Metro Pictures gallery, New York, New York)
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