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Tim Bavington. (Reviews: Los Angeles).


MARK MOORE GALLERY

I think of Tim Bavington as a kind of bartender. Trained in Las Vegas, America's speakeasy Speakeasy - Simple array-oriented language with numerical integration and differentiation, graphical output, aimed at statistical analysis.

["Speakeasy", S. Cohen, SIGPLAN Notices 9(4), (Apr 1974)].

["Speakeasy-3 Reference Manual", S. Cohen et al. 1976].
 for broad definitions of aesthetic activity (where he was mentored and championed by resident aesthete aes·thete or es·thete  
n.
1. One who cultivates an unusually high sensitivity to beauty, as in art or nature.

2. One whose pursuit and admiration of beauty is regarded as excessive or affected.
 Dave Hickey), he serves up exotic cocktails on canvas, which like all exotic cocktails, necessitate odd names. Bavington borrows his titles, such as Crossroad Blues and Aqualung, from songs and albums by classic-rock bands like Cream and Jethro Tull. Composed of vertical stripes rendered in unmasked, airbrushed acrylic spray on canvas, Bavington's latest paintings (all works 2002) balanced precision and fuzziness, premeditation premeditation n. planning, plotting or deliberating before doing something. Premeditation is an element in first degree murder and shows intent to commit that crime. (See: malice aforethought, murder, first degree murder)


PREMEDITATION.
 and intuitive expression. Combining an incredible number of colors, these canvases sometimes were amazing recipes of subtle layering, and sometimes seemed more like suicide drinks. Either way, you were happy to be served by someone who understands indulgence: Their colors were crisp and distinct; yet they also constantly faded into one another, and you could sense where the painter fell into a g roove and continued riffing on the same combinations, or chose to ditch the composition momentarily to add interest.

In the exhibition gallery, Crossroad Blues--Solo (After Cream) immediately commanded attention with its extreme horizontality (the work is roughly three feet high and twelve feet wide) pitted against vertical lines. Together these elements created the sense of something rushing by, teasing viewers to scan the sequence of alternating pinks, oranges, and lavenders, which was punctuated by a flash of mint near the middle and which ended at the far right with a shock of fuchsia fuchsia: see evening primrose.
fuchsia

Any of about 100 species of flowering shrubs and trees in the genus Fuchsia (family Onagraceae), native to tropical and subtropical regions of Central and South America and to New Zealand and Tahiti.
 and a parting gift of chocolate brown. The real scene-stealer was Aqualung (Solo). With its repeating sequences of spectrally ordered color bands--like bits of rainbows spliced into the composition--alternating with what seemed like the stripes from every ski sweater ever made, the piece enveloped en·vel·op  
tr.v. en·vel·oped, en·vel·op·ing, en·vel·ops
1. To enclose or encase completely with or as if with a covering: "Accompanying the darkness, a stillness envelops the city" 
 you in six feet by twelve feet of rippling, pulsating color. Also included were two diptychs in which one striped canvas hangs above another: In Hey Joe--Solo, hotel-room pastels appeared above acid hues; a syncopated syn·co·pate  
tr.v. syn·co·pat·ed, syn·co·pat·ing, syn·co·pates
1. Grammar To shorten (a word) by syncope.

2. Music To modify (rhythm) by syncopation.
 composition in Babe, I'm Gon na Leave You (Solo) surmounted sur·mount  
tr.v. sur·mount·ed, sur·mount·ing, sur·mounts
1. To overcome (an obstacle, for example); conquer.

2. To ascend to the top of; climb.

3.
a. To place something above; top.
 another composition in which Bavington's bands were nearly metronomic--even in width and placement. Both these works suggested a promising direction.

There's little question that these paintings have a musical quality, as many abstract paintings do. I have my doubts about Bavington's rock 'n' roll rock 'n' roll: see rock music.  titles, which seem to be attempts to give the work an edginess that the stronger paintings don't need (and the weaker ones aren't going to get). I do, however, appreciate being able to call these works something more enjoyable than No. 1 or No. 2, and it's easy to imagine the paintings as spiritual channelings of good rock classics (although the canvases seem interchangeable in this sense). What's more, the works, and their titles, reflect a younger artist's unapologetic aesthetic sensibility that includes pop, rock, and mod in its source material, not to mention Vegas Baroque and Marfa Minimalism minimalism, schools of contemporary art and music, with their origins in the 1960s, that have emphasized simplicity and objectivity. Minimalism in the Visual Arts
, Dan Flavin, Kenneth Noland, bar codes, Bridget Riley, psychedelia psy·che·de·li·a  
n.
The subculture associated with psychedelic drugs.

Noun 1. psychedelia - the subculture of users of psychedelic drugs
, electronica, Ed Ruscha, test patterns, screen savers, Hang Ten T-shirts, Saturday Night Fever disco floors, and the communication sequences in Close Encounters of the Third Kind. And like that drink tha t didn't sound so good when you heard the ingredients but turned out to warrant another round, Bavington's paintings, at their best, show that even the funky and often-maligned spirits on which his generation was weaned make for fine cocktails when properly poured.
COPYRIGHT 2002 Artforum International Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
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Author:Miles, Christopher
Publication:Artforum International
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Nov 1, 2002
Words:567
Previous Article:Vincent Fecteau. (Reviews: Berkeley, CA).
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