Expressing the complex with color
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BOBBIE ALLEN
Art and fashion have had a long marriage. The Los Angeles Museum of
Art now has a wonderful collection on view, highlighting opera
costumes designed by artists such as Henri Matisse. Sometimes,
artists became famous because their outfits, choosing something
outrageous or “signature” (Picasso, for instance, favored bold
striped shirts, now in vogue again). Even Jackson Pollock’s black
denim and T-shirt was an anti-conformist statement appropriate for
his time, 1940s America, and represented his commanding and
aggressive mastery of paint.
Perhaps, then, it is no coincidence that there is a heavy Pollock
influence in the work of Vladimir Prodanovich, permanently on view at
X Art and Fashion (226 Ocean Ave.). Prodanovich’s work hangs on the
walls above and around racks of clothing exclusively designed by
Katharine Story -- beautiful clothes with unusual lines, contrasting
fabric and color combinations -- that work in complement with
Prodanovich’s canvases and sculptures.
“Perfect Harmony” (acrylic on canvas, 68x61) fills the back wall
of the gallery. It makes free use of spattered paint, with layers of
bright greens and yellows, in Pollock-like zeal. But his work is not
completely abstract. Flashes of crimson and black let us know this is
a poppy field. The texture and size of the canvas are absorbing; and
in homage to his own labor, Prodanovich has affixed his
paint-stiffened brushes to the canvas.
Really, his work displays an amazing array of abstract
expressionist influences. The walls leading to “Perfect Harmony”
contain four highly glazed, translucent color studies that betray an
admiration for Mark Rothko. Rothko produced soaring, transcendent
canvases with multiple, thin layers that produced an illusion of
incredible depth. Prodanovich, in “Horizontal Composition” and
“Vertical Composition” (both oil on canvas, 32x38), uses dark
underpaint to emphasize vivid, strangely peaceful reds, whites, and
bright fuchsias. They are a lovely homage to a master.
But it is Prodanovich’s color palette that marks his style. He
tends to choose colors that appear opposite each other on the color
wheel. All are rich and intense: No thin, watery pastels here. The
same reds, violets, and yellows appear again and again in eclectic
variety. All his canvases are highly layered; but texture,
composition and form can vary widely but are all executed with
mastery. Even his sculptures, scattered throughout the gallery, are
bright and geometric. They are very painterly, cubist with bold
lines. (More sculptures will be highlighted at an artist’s reception
Jan. 31.)
The artist seems to have an affinity for flowers, and I wonder if
this isn’t because of his attraction to such bright ranges of color.
Another large canvas, “Flowers Awakening” (acrylic, 64x64) fills the
front window. In it, large, simple petals in a daisy-like pattern
blaze optimistically at the viewer, nearly naive.
But that same range of brights appears also in a series of
canvases that are based around the dark depictions of a woman’s
profile. She is partially present-from the hips up-standing now in
front of a violet ground, now gray. “Woman with Red Hair” (oil,
43x33) is so composed and still that is seems almost sad. Her face is
a purple smear, but the gesso underwork and rough texture of the
clouds suggest melancholy contemplation.
The same exact form -- the same pose, the same woman-is also in
“Waiting” (oil, 32x38). This time the deep violet and orange ground
suggests something more sensual. It is interesting to see such
variations on a theme.
A series of horizon paintings show Prodanovich playing with pure
colors. “Purple Dream” (oil, 32x38) uses a storm of colors with
subtle, thick application. A range of purples draw the eye to a
textured green, red and orange horizon line. All the same, it is a
very flat canvas, like Prodanovich’s other compositions in similar
colors. “Horizon” (32x38) almost looks like green and blue silk, like
the fabric in Story’s skirts and blouses that hang below.
Rothko and fellow artist Adolph Gottlieb wrote, “We favor the
simple expression of the complex thought. We are for the large shape
because it has the impact of the unequivocal. We wish to reassert the
picture plane. We are for flat forms because they destroy illusion
and reveal truth.” These words could not be more apt for Prodanovich,
executing the complex thought in his own, highly individual sense of
color.
* BOBBIE ALLEN is a poet and writer who has taught art theory and
criticism. She currently teaches writing at the University of
California, Irvine.
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