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Russell Crotty. (Reviews: New York).


CRG GALLERY

Living in a city shrouded by the squalid yellow haze of light pollution, one easily forgets how confoundingly beautiful a clear night sky can be. Russell Crotty, a documentarian for the Association of Lunar and Planetary Observers (a body of amateur astronomers who assist the pros), experiences no such dilemma. Couched in the Solstice Peak Observatory, which he built himself, high in the Santa Monica mountains, he spends hours gazing into space through a ten-inch f/8 Newtonian reflector telescope and sketching what he sees. Yet while he is obviously transported by the transcendent grandeur of his observations, the silhouettes of buildings and trees that often jut from the margins of his images reveal a reassuringly earthbound willingness to take the rough with the smooth.

Crotty's second exhibition in New York consisted of seven Lucite Lucite: see polyacrylics. spheres suspended from the ceiling at around eye level. Varying in size from sixteen to forty-five inches in diameter, each one is cloaked in a meticulous representation of a constellation, star cluster star cluster, a group of stars near each other in space and resembling each other in certain characteristics that suggest a common origin for the group. Stars in the same cluster move at the same rate and in the same direction. Two types of clusters can be distinguished—open clusters, also called galactic clusters because of their wide distribution in our galaxy (the Milky Way), and globular clusters., meteor shower meteor shower, increase in the number of meteors observed in a particular part of the sky. The trails of the meteors of a meteor shower all appear to be traceable back to a single point in the sky, known as the radiant point, or radiant. A shower is named for the constellation in which its radiant is located, e.g., the Lyrids appear to come from a point in Lyra, the Perseids from Perseus, and the Orionids from Orion., or other celestial formation rendered in black ballpoint pen with touches of watercolor. The use of short vertical strokes affords even areas of relative darkness a restlessly effervescent surface. Such precise application also distances the artist from any lingering association with the "abject" dub of the mid-'9os--Sean Landers, Mike Kelley, and others--who shared his fondness for low-rent materials. Crotty made his name drawing surfers, but unwavering discipline has taken him light-years from the life's-abeach sensibility.

While Crotty also presents his drawings in more predictable formats, globes seem particularly appropriate. They nudge the viewer toward an altered perception of scale and perspective that encompasses the infinite while remaining centered on a discrete sculptural object. Turning the view of space to which we are accustomed inside out, they remind us of what we know but have been conditioned by pictorial convention to disregard: that the sky is not a flat backdrop but rather a three-dimensional space in which we are adrift.

The only information we are provided with about most of Crotry's globes comes from their factual titles: M13 Globular Star Cluster in Hercules; or NGC 6992, Eastern Loop of the Veil Nebula in Cygnus (both 2002). But one work, The Leonid Meteor Shower, 2002, incorporates a passage of text. Filling the landscape that covers the globe's south pole, this poetic, diaristic account of watching the event emphasizes the line between part-timer and professional scientist that the artist effectively straddles. Spiced with as many references to his immediate surroundings as to the universe at large, the description stands revealed to be colored by human emotion.

Despite its visual echoes of cool objective record, Crotty's project is indisputably born of passion. It also relies on memory, as the artist retains images from his sessions at the telescope in order to reproduce them later. As every schoolkid knows, the light from distant stars can take so long to reach us that we may often be looking at objects that no longer exist. What Crotty draws is therefore a map of time itself, in which the patience of the artist and the fascination of the viewer are positioned in relation to the totality of their context. But what could be a pretentious and alienating enterprise is redeemed by the humble enthusiasm of its creator.
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.

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Author:Wilson, Michael
Publication:Artforum International
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Dec 1, 2002
Words:550
Previous Article:John Hejduk. (Reviews: New York).
Next Article:Diana Cooper. (Reviews: New York).
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