A colorist finds his dynamic voice
What constitutes a distinctive artistic style? At what point in an
artist’s career can you recognize the painter’s work, even if you’ve
never seen a particular painting before?
All artists worth the name struggle with the issue of style, of
the original creation that is at once recognizable and impossible to
copy, familiar and yet totally novel. “Make it new,” the poet Ezra
Pound said, and the phrase became the anthem for everything modern.
It’s rare to be able to see this great struggle in progress, much
less completion, but the work of Larry Christy (Larry Christy Studio
Gallery, 1476 S. Coast Highway) will show you just that. Hanging on
the walls of his small gallery is a pictorial story of how art can
totally take over the artist, how method becomes style.
Begin with color. Christy is a colorist in the tradition of
Barnett Newman and Mark Rothko, a figure who has cast a long shadow
into our time. You might think this simply means he paints large
color fields, but really it’s a way of painting, using “automatic”
methods: working spontaneously, without plan, allowing inner voices
to guide the composition.
You can see this kind of thing in Christy’s “A Lazy Afternoon”
(50x38). But he has already separated himself from his predecessors
with the suggestion of representation in the title. It’s a fairly
simple canvas, the familiar bars of color -- bands of florescent
yellows, oranges, pinks blended gently into each other. It evokes
light in August, and its title delivers what it promises.
But more interesting is “At the Circus.” Your eyes dance around a
large-scale (60x60) vibrant orange canvas. They dance because
floating around in the orange are amorphous, vaguely organic shapes
(“elements” Christy calls them). They range in clarity of shape. The
upper left element is cadmium yellow, roughly formed. The lower
elements are clearly defined against the orange in olive and Kelly
green. But sharpest is a small turquoise blue dab of paint --
turquoise against orange, shocking to the eye.
Something is happening here. “Elements” have emerged from plain
color fields. Both “A Lazy Afternoon” and “At the Circus” are
matte-finish paintings, with the only brushwork visible in the under
paint. The flatness of this finish makes the canvas almost static.
But the addition of form invites movement.
By contrast, “Breathe Color, Touching Air” (36x60) is an ethereal
blue-green study full of these floating elements done in a high
gloss. There are many layers of paint here; while true of the other
earlier paintings, these layers create depth rather than density.
Christy is struggling with something. The composition is full of
movement. Similar canvases demonstrate a dynamic change in his ideas
about color. Christy even drew lines into the first layers of paint,
wrestling with the texture, something he says was an “attempt to
compensate for not enough control.”
The next step in Christy’s stylistic evolution seems totally
unexpected to me. Such forward leaps of intuition and skill usually
are. He began painting sharply defined, architectural forms. He calls
this series, “Reflecting Windows,” a provocative name.
They are passionate pursuits of the pure expression of color.
It is the final emergence of a truly original style, the
resolution of the tensions and limits of working in color fields.
“Reflecting Windows #29” (60x36) is a lean, pared down, and
tightly controlled work of art. It is as if Christy is saying that
shape and color can never be perfectly expressed at the same time,
but this canvas is his answer to that tension. The colors are muted,
but each color is a pure exploration of the way colors operate on
each other, on perceptions of depth and space, on our notions of
harmony. Like other paintings in the series, there is a combination
of bars and curves that sit easily on the canvas. The colors
encounter each other harmoniously. Christy worked with each shape and
color individually, sometimes in many layers, sometimes few, working
with it until it was finished.
How does he know? What brought on this sudden change of direction?
People flock to “retrospectives” when they come to museums seeking
answers to these questions. There’s something about being able to
trace the line of thought back through the work that makes it seem
easier to understand. But you can study the early street scenes of
Rothko (yes, he painted street scenes, even portraits),
intellectualize them all you want, and you will never really know
what led him to “Untitled, 1953.” Only the artist knows this.
Sometimes, not even the artist knows. It’s intangible, illusive.
Talking with Christy, you get that impression. He knows only that
this is the way he must paint, because this is the way his art tells
him he must. He can vividly describe the problems he has answered in
the “Reflecting Windows” series, but its meaning to him is
self-explanatory: It means itself.
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