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SHIRAZEH HOUSHIARY.


On entering Shirazeh Houshiary's show, one saw what appeared to be a group of monochromes--some black, some white, and all square--installed in contrasting groups of large and small works. As one drew nearer to several of the paintings, however, one began to discern the presence of Arabic texts (actually Sufist chants), meticulously transcribed onto the canvas in graphite or pigment, where they proliferate like coral. These inscriptions are clearly legible leg·i·ble  
adj.
1. Possible to read or decipher: legible handwriting.

2. Plainly discernible; apparent: legible weaknesses in character and disposition.
 when examined up close (the fact that they are incomprehensible to most Western readers only adds to their exoticism ex·ot·i·cism  
n.
The quality or condition of being exotic.


exoticism
the condition of being foreign, striking, or unusual in color and design. — exoticist, n.
), and evoke Muslim iconography iconography (ī'kŏnŏg`rəfē) [Gr.,=image-drawing] or iconology [Gr.,=image-study], in art history, the study and interpretation of figural representations, either individual or symbolic, religious or secular; . From any distance, the work seems to illustrate perfectly Robert Motherwell's observation that abstract painting is a form of mysticism mysticism (mĭs`tĭsĭzəm) [Gr.,=the practice of those who are initiated into the mysteries], the practice of putting oneself into, and remaining in, direct relation with God, the Absolute, or any unifying principle of life. . But just as important, Houshiary has produced convincing monochrome field paintings that refine and intensify "post-painterly abstraction Post-painterly Abstraction is a term created by art critic Clement Greenberg as the title for an exhibit he curated for the Los Angeles County Museum of Art in 1964, which subsequently travelled to the Walker Art Center and the Art Gallery of Ontario in Toronto. " to uncanny new perceptual effect.

Kenneth Noland Kenneth Noland (born April 10, 1924) is an American painter. He is identified today as one of the best-known contemporary American Color field painters, although in the 1950s he was thought of as an abstract expressionist and in the early 1960s he was thought of as a minimalist  seems a particular, if oblique, influence on Houshiary, as suggested by the circular imagery in a number of works--in Luminous darkness, 1998, the center is marked by a yellowish bull's-eye--and by the highly nuanced surface. Even more crucially, at least from my point of view, Houshiary's paintings are unabashedly un·a·bashed  
adj.
1. Not disconcerted or embarrassed; poised.

2. Not concealed or disguised; obvious: unabashed disgust.
 aesthetic, indeed beautiful. Under the auspices of religious idealism, these works become formally ideal. Like abstraction, beauty has also been thought to have mystical import, that is, regarded as a mode of transcendence and self-recovery. Houshiary's works restore spiritual feeling to abstract painting, which, under Greenberg's ministrations, had become mindlessly materialistic. As titles such as Brittle Moment, Presence, and Veil indicate, Houshiary's canvases seem to "picture" a perceptual epiphany--the moment that spirit becomes manifest and one realizes that there is a center to existence and to one's being.

Houshiary's titles make clear as well that she is in pursuit of what has traditionally been called the sublime; for her, beauty is its surface. The physical experience of approaching her paintings, then, is in effect a spiritual experience, that is, a process of initiation and revelation. From a distance they look like blank slates; as one gets closer one sees the more or less clear mandala-like, peculiarly dense form embedded in their seemingly amorphous surface; and up close one discovers the intricate, excited, minute detail. The emerging center comes to represent the ritualized concentration necessary for inner illumination. Equally important, from a purely painting point of view, Houshiary's works show a patient perfectionism per·fec·tion·ism
n.
A tendency to set rigid high standards of personal performance.



per·fection·ist adj. & n.
 that seems increasingly rare today, and thus all the more admirable.

--Donald Kuspit
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Title Annotation:paintings, various galleries and cities
Author:Kuspit, Donald
Publication:Artforum International
Date:Nov 1, 1999
Words:401
Previous Article:COLLIER SCHORR.(photographs, 303 Gallery, New York, New York)
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