Something fresh at Sandstone Gallery
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AT THE GALLERIES
One of the things that I most admire about what we now call modern
art is its innovation, its drive to constantly make things new (to
paraphrase poet Ezra Pound, who was in turn translating Confucius).
Never settling in one place, it is constantly remaking itself to
challenge the viewer, drawing on new media, and then abandoning it
for something else when this becomes tired or hackneyed.
Abstract art was its earliest innovations, generally beginning at
the turn of the 20th century when artists began to see the role of
art as more complex than a “mirror held up to nature.” Often objects
from nature were “abstracted” -- or you could say, broken down to
their most general geometric elements. Strangely, innovations in film
and photography contributed to these ideas, as artist like Pablo
Picasso and Georges Braque attempted to capture an object’s many
different perspectives -- like a woman’s face from the front, from
profile and the movement from one to the other -- simultaneously on
the canvas’s flat surface. It was highly ambitious.
This led some artists to abandon even the vaguest concrete
subject, focusing instead on a concept, mood or theme. Artists like
Mark Rothko or Wassily Kandinsky began to take their subjects from
aspects of experience that had never been represented in art before
or had only been represented by personification -- a god or goddess
figure -- like music. This move changed painting radically, from
allegory to a more complex and illusory pursuit of an idea.
Judith Anton, who exhibits at the Sandstone Gallery here in Laguna
(384-A N. Coast Highway), is clearly an inheritor of both experiments
with material and with subject, showing strong influence from
Kandinsky. Rather than oil, watercolor or acrylic, Anton uses special
fabric dyes on raw canvas. This gives her work both saturation and
transparency, a combination that has a distinctive feel.
A work titled “Copernicus” is a swirling set of impressions
suggesting the movement of the planets and astronomical calculations
simultaneously. Round balls of vivid primary colors swing through a
washed green ground, connected by strings of black. When spheres
collide, their forms and colors intersect and change, suggesting both
movement and physics. Triangles and pound signs dance rhythmically
together.
Like Kandinsky, Anton takes subjects from music. “Cool Jazz”
combines flesh and sage tones with four black spirals that suggest
variations on a theme (Kandinsky had a number of canvases titled
“Improvisation”). Here, the black lines that connect the shapes vary
in width, change in intensity, suggesting beats and measures, the
variations on a theme that comprise a jazz performance. This is even
more emphasized in two smaller canvases called “Soundbytes,”
utilizing golds, pinks and oranges, opening the idea up with more
space between figures.
Sometimes the material is the message in these works. Sandstone
Gallery founder Marge Chapman, uses collage. Both Picasso and Braque
began working pieces of newspaper into their paintings. This is now
famously called “mixed media,” artists often using too many different
kinds of materials to be named. Chapman’s “It Figures” is mixed media
on paper. Its basis is an abstract line drawing of a sitting woman,
surrounded with bits of textured red and black paper, tiny metallic
threads, and washes of turquoise and yellow paint, with touches of
gold leaf. It is a pleasing composition, where the eye wanders from
the texture in the foreground to the figure in the background.
Chapman’s work with female figures shows and eclectic set of
influences, including even Marcel Duchamp. His famous “Nude
Descending a Staircase, No. 2” attempted to capture motion on a
static canvas. Two monotypes by Chapman, both titled “African Dance,”
feature a simplified female dancer in the various stages of a dance,
sometimes jumping lightly in the air. The monotype format, slightly
grainy and rough, gives the set the impression of fabric. The paint
was pushed around the plate in vertical streaks, adding to the sense
of movement. Simple black and white (with some sepia brown tones)
makes it seem like a set of time-lapsed photographs. Another collage
work, “Homage to Oliveiras” layers jewel-toned fragments of textured
paper over the dream-like form of a human figure. That figure, seen
slightly from the side, seems warm and burnished, a harmonious center
to the surrounding fragments of red, blue, violet and green.
Many artists work exclusively in collage. Those artists are an
interesting hybrid of painting and sculpture, constantly on the
lookout for items they can manipulate in their art. In the 20th
century, anything from a delicate feather to a piece of sheet metal
can be found on the wall in museums. Mia Moore, another Sandstone
artist, uses collage in its “purist” form, collecting antique Asian
papers and using the fragments in her three-dimensional compositions.
“Asian Banner” combines three collage-on-paper panels under a split
bamboo beam. The splashes of red, torn pieces of old calligraphy in
Asian script, and a small image of Mount Fuji give the composition a
sense of nobility, violence and grace.
Collage artists see art as a kind of harmony that can be achieved
by taking parts of experience and reassembling them into a new whole.
Moore’s “Asian Chime” invites us to hear that harmony, fashioning two
fan-like strips of collaged paper with gold wire, bits of gold
bamboo, jade pendants, brass calligraphy, bone carvings and glass or
gemstone beads. Junk, even trash, comes together to create something
of beauty. That is the surprise of contemporary art, the freshness of
a new perspective.
* BOBBIE ALLEN is a poet and writer who has taught art theory and
criticism. She currently teaches at Saddleback College.
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