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Sue Williams: 303 Gallery.


In 2000, the New Yorker congratulated Sue Williams on her metamorphosis from "the angriest woman in the art world" to a "sort of blissed-out innocent," a feminist turned formalist (as if these terms were mutually exclusive) who nonetheless was still resigned to playing "Ginger Rogers" to Willem de Kooning's "Fred Astaire." Now, five years later, such insidiously sycophantic syc·o·phant  
n.
A servile self-seeker who attempts to win favor by flattering influential people.



[Latin s
 gender politics are all but displaced, even if it is hard to see Williams's recent work apart from her earlier agitprop exercises in aggressive desublimation. But perhaps that's the point. Here as elsewhere, Williams's work challenges easy circumscription--as style, as ideology, as teleology teleology (tĕl'ēŏl`əjē, tē'lē–), in philosophy, term applied to any system attempting to explain a series of events in terms of ends, goals, or purposes. , and as rhetoric--and likewise refuses neat definition. Her apocalyptic wallpaper renders power, whether patriarchal or otherwise, potently visceral, productively slipping the noose of absolutist readings with each gummy convolution convolution /con·vo·lu·tion/ (-loo´shun) a tortuous irregularity or elevation caused by the infolding of a structure upon itself.  of line.

Yet at 303 Gallery, Williams's new large-scale canvases also offer a different sort of object lesson, one based less on contentious ambiguities of victimization victimization Social medicine The abuse of the disenfranchised–eg, those underage, elderly, ♀, mentally retarded, illegal aliens, or other, by coercing them into illegal activities–eg, drug trade, pornography, prostitution.  than on overtly tendentious mockery. With titles like Springtime for the RNC, newamerican century.org, and Because We Care (all works 2005), Williams's antipathy toward our current political climate and the reprehensible agents responsible for it is finally unequivocal. Holding the front gallery with their phantasmagoric dreamscapes, cartoon-laden biomorphism Biomorphism is an art movement that began in the 20th century.

The term was first used in 1936, by Alfred H. Barr, Jr. Biomorphist art focuses on the power of natural life and uses organic shapes, with shapeless and vaguely spherical hints of the forms of biology.
, and bitingly radioactive color, such works enact a slow burn, by turns optical and conceptual.

Springtime for the RNC evidences, according to the press release, "flowery pink anal orifices expanding and contracting in the breeze" splayed across a surface of citrus green, while newamericancen tury.org displays chalky intestinal forms rimmed in blood red against a periwinkle periwinkle, in zoology
periwinkle, any of a group of marine gastropod mollusks having conical, spiral shells. Periwinkles feed on algae and seaweed.
 ground, a manifesto of all-American grotesquerie gro·tes·que·ry also gro·tes·que·rie  
n. pl. gro·tes·que·ries
1. The state of being grotesque; grotesqueness.

2. Something grotesque.

Noun 1.
. And then there is the wonderfully discordant Because We Care, a pink-on-pink valentine replete with all manner of cavities and protrusions dangling and interpenetrating across its frenetic field. Equally choleric chol·er·ic
adj.
1. Easily angered; bad-tempered.

2. Showing or expressing anger.
 is Bindweed bindweed: see morning glory.
bindweed

Any plant of the closely related genera Convolvulus and Calystegia, mostly twining, often weedy, and producing funnel-shaped flowers.
 and Red, a densely populated expanse of appendages in gnawing chartreuse that perceptibly warps ambient light with its volatile fluorescence. (It helps to know that while certain species of bindweed often have attractive flowers, it can also strangle other, more desirable growth.)

In the back gallery, Williams continued her playfully relentless assault with a suite of smaller ink drawings. Gnarly (jargon) gnarly - /nar'lee/ Both obscure and hairy. "Yow! - the tuned assembler implementation of BitBlt is really gnarly!" From a similar but less specific usage in surfer slang. , Orange Grove, The Blue One, and Bouncy, works in purple, orange, blue, and black, respectively, adopted the paintings' anal-erotic forms, but reduced them to a more intimate and affecting scale. The linear tracery familiar from the paintings here takes over, becoming a teeming scrawl. Graphic sinews dovetail and fan back out, producing weirdly cosmic--and unforgivingly vulgar--passages in which concave forms are either rectums or black (or acid-orange) holes.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

In the drawings, then, there is a smirking jocularity that remains unfixed in referential association. These smart-ass doodles are bawdy in their own way, and unlike the paintings, with their more explicit titles, they are harder to pin down. Here Williams has come full circle, but with a difference. These works are neither didactic nor elusive, but jokes as Freud once conceived of them: psychoanalysis in reverse. They might not be a talking cure for our social ills, much less compensations for Williams's prior flight from political engagement--if indeed that was what it even was--but they are small ruptures, moments of release and undoing. In times like these, it's nice to know that someone still has an unconscious worthy of inhibition--and also a conscience, too.
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Article Details
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Author:Hudson, Suzanne
Publication:Artforum International
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Dec 1, 2005
Words:555
Previous Article:"Melancholy: Genius and Madness in the West", Galeries Nationales du Grand Palais, Paris.
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