Monday, December 28, 2015

Wolf Kahn at Ameringer McEnery Yohe




And now for something completely different - to see the woods as a place of wonder, comfort, and good energy!  Wolf Kahn is one of my favorite colorists!  I love being in the woods and I love the feeling of being surrounded by the peaceful and colorful tricks of light and space that comes in being in an environment of almost completely obstructed view.   

Wolf Kahn is a figurative painter, painting from observation, memory, and emotion.   With the abstract expressionist influences of paint handling, zealous mark making, and brilliant color combinations, Wolf Kahn makes images that walk in both realms of realism and abstraction. 
The show is unfortunately down now, but if you are like my family, you will be taking some long walks in the short afternoons with your family at this time between holidays.  This is the time when the light dances through the landscape in the brilliant colors of winter twilight.  Think of Wolf Kahn and the colors of the woods while you are out there!

More at: http://www.amy-nyc.com/artists/wolf-kahn

Monday, December 21, 2015

Ralph Eugene Meatyard at DC Moore




#48 ID, 1968-72. Gelatin silver print, 6 3/4 x 7 1/2 in. 

As a child I spent a lot of time in the woods.  I went through a phase where I was afraid to be alone there.  My father told us kids stories of a little old woman who lived in an isolated cabin.  She was a witch.  If you found the cabin, it meant you were lost and you would never return.  It was his version of a bedtime story.  For a bunch of kids growing up in a cabin located a quarter mile off the main road, surrounded by miles of uninterrupted woods, the story rang a chord of truth and warning in my mind that could not be disputed.   I would walk into the woods and sense the presence of a dark and mysterious figure just in the periphery of my vision.  I would turn my head quickly to find an irregularly shaped stump-not the old witch.  With shot nerves I would run back to the house as quickly as I could.  It wasn’t as fast as it could have been.  I was never a runner.

Untitled, 1961. Gelatin silver print, 7 1/2 x 7 3/4 in.

Years later, the cabin still stands, the woods, although smaller, still remain, and now that I have Meatyard’s photographs in my mind, my old fears of figures haunting the woods have been remembered and re-imagined with vigor.   
 
Ralph Eugene Meatyard, “Occasion for Diriment” (1962), Gelatin silver print, 7.25 x 7.25 in (Guy Davenport Collection, Harry Ransom Center © The Estate of Ralph Eugene Meatyard; all images courtesy of the Blanton Museum of Art)
Meatyard’s images investigate focus and lack thereof.  It appears he has found the impossible line between blurry enough to not see clearly and focused enough to know that what you are looking at is terrifying.  There are children in the woods wearing masks of elderly faces, children in the woods climbing through sharp brush.  There are images depicting the limbs of child and limbs of tree in a strange, petrified parallel.  There are dark places with only enough light to see the outline of a small figure that couldn’t quite be human.  There are haunting images of common, mundane sheds, old barns, outhouses from another era, standing in places people no longer go.   As disturbing as Meatyard’s images of his kids and wife (and their various masks and doll parts) are, they are hauntingly beautiful.  The show closes December 23.  This is not one to miss!


More to read at Hyperallergic: http://hyperallergic.com/184926/the-suburban-dad-who-took-the-1960s-eeriest-photos/
 


More at: http://www.dcmooregallery.com/exhibitions/2015-11-19_ralph-eugene-meatyard

Monday, December 14, 2015

Margaret Bowland at Driscoll Babcock


Margaret Bowland
DUST UP, 2015
Oil on linen, 90 x 60 inches


The show Power is a fantastically painted, super charged commentary on the American caste.  The work is psychologically charged and deeply meaningful.  Every element, from the barbed wire vines blooming paper money flowers, the blue “blood” ,the metaphysical barriers, the crows, the princess dresses, the white face, the fire…. JMW Turner’s paintings burn into the background of a royal portrait, the burning Slave Ship, and the House of Commons remind us that our history is just the present -with half measured “resolution”.  Every painting is an allegory on the cultural tiers of race, gender, and beauty.  My reactions to this show are probably to new for a proper review but it is a show that will stay with me for a long, long time.  Bowland is our modern master surrealist. 
For more info go to: http://www.driscollbabcock.com/exhibitions/installation/margaret-bowland-power