by Bruce Halpin
5/29/17
Webster's defines beautiful as “exciting
aesthetic pleasure and generally pleasing:
excellent. Beauty’s rather slippery definition allows for two
distinct and possibly conflicting interpretations, only one of which is useful
in discussing art. What is pleasing or harmonious in nature is just that; as a
decidedly human dimension, the term beautiful can only be an attributed of art.
Far from being a trivial concern, contemplation of the beautiful, as G.E Moore
argues in his Principia Ethica, is along with human relationships, the
greatest, or perhaps the only human good.
Subsequent to Edmund Burke's establishment of
the sublime as the counter to the beautiful, beauty's validity has been
subject to severe criticism and questionable status in aesthetic matters.
Beauty, considered as pleasant or harmonious, has been in question as a
desirable quality in art since Romanticism. Indeed, modernists eschewed “the
beautiful” as superfluous and misleading as an aesthetic concern. What may be called “the beautiful” has
been enjoying a restoration of reputation for some time now, and a deeper
understanding of the role of beauty is emerging.
The latest show at Drawing Rooms in Jersey City, “Bold
and Beautiful”, is testament to the validity of its reevaluation. Irony
seems to have been banished in favor of a less distanced and more earnest
engagement with beauty on the part of the artists in this show to varying
degrees.
The artists are not aligned with any particular ideology, approach
their work from different perspectives and engage with the history of their
prospective mediums accordingly. Traditional techniques coexist with radical
approaches without unnecessary friction. This is a show that allows artists to
be who they are and cleverness is of less value than sincerity.
Ben Pranger, Tree of Caves, 2015, Papier--Mâché,
Wood and Acrylic, 43 x 32 x 25
Ben Pranger’s sculptures use color in an
expressive way without succumbing to the decorative. They use color, but are
not dependent on it– in fact, color seems to provide a parallel experience to
form. The sculptures look perhaps like the nests of robotic insects, which
happen to have a lively and sophisticated sense of color. They are fun. While
all of the sculptures are fairly modest in size, they could easily exist in a much
larger size and scale.
Jill Scipione, Undoing History, Palm Sunday, Male,
Pencil on Paper, 96 x 59
Jill Scipione’s drawings of skulls are sincere and
powerful in a way that is not easily grasped. The effect is not that of
momento, mori but some other less easily accessed emotion. Skulls are necessary
reminders of our transience, that which remains after our passage through this
life. Ms. Scipione’s use of skulls introduce a sense of
monumentality in the way they are installed on the walls. The skulls are drawn
life-size in a manner which invokes less an academic rendering, but a more
scruffy, yet delicate approach, perhaps reminiscent of Leon Golub. Drawn from “life”, they
evince careful observation delivered in an unstructured, yet controlled manner.
Ms. Scipione locates the meaning of her work in the consideration of the human
body as an expression of the spiritual. Her use of skulls, which span a large
temporal and geographical range, engage concepts of human individuality and the
redemption only possible through an undoing of history in order to restore hope
and justice to all of humanity.
David French, Madame LeBlanc, 2014,
Oil and Gold Powder on Herringbone Twill Linen, 82 x 76
David French’s paintings evoke a kind of painterly
ecstasy. These works knock the ball out of the park. Their large size tends to
overwhelm the viewer in the context of their installation; it is difficult if
not impossible to get far enough away from them to take them in one gaze.
These tough, visceral works are painting with a capital "P", and deliver an
emotional punch to the gut. These paintings engage beauty’s
doppelganger, the sublime in their effect.
Thomas Lendvai, 2017
Thomas Lendvai’s sculpture provides a gripping
experiential dialog within the confines of the gallery space. The work is
comprised of sheets of painted MDF joined in a way that creates a paradoxical
volume. The more the viewer tries to understand the form, the more elusive it
becomes. It is impossible to get far enough away from the sculpture to take it
in at one look, forcing the viewer to engage in a peripatetic engagement
frustrating a simple comprehension of this sculpture despite the seeming
simplicity of the form. This is highly effective work.
Cecile Chong, In A Different Light, 2011, Encaustic, 50 x 54
Cecile Chong engages beauty on the level of materiality and
memory. Her encaustic paintings, densely layered with diverse ingredients,
combine cultures, recollection, and personal history in a way that manages to
be beautiful and poignant while avoiding sentimentality. These works seem to be
telling a story that is like a dream that vanishes upon awakening, leaving only
traces and hints of meaning.
Kathy Cantwell, The Hidden Life Of Stripes 12, 2016,
Encaustic, 24 x 36
Kathy Cantwell's paintings are comprised solely of stripes of
color, executed in encaustic, and provide chromatic complexity within a reduced
set of means. Encaustic proves a congenial medium for Ms. Cantwell’s
explorations, giving the color a physicality without diminishing optical effect
as color. It is to Ms. Cantwell’s credit that the reductive process she
choses in no way limits the depth and complexity of the expressive content of
these paintings.
Andra Samelson, Rhetoric for an Apparition, 2016,
Acrylic on Canvas, 30 x 30
Andra Samelson’s unabashedly beautiful paintings are
evocative of tantric art, as well as a sense of the sublime as expressed in
nature, namely the cosmos and its attendant vastness. Employing various tools,
Ms. Samelson draws into the paint she has applied, resulting in a gestural
presence that is improvisational and spontaneous. The paintings presented here
are modest in size but large in scale, giving the impression that they could be
much larger.
Patricia Fabricant, WSP 012017, 2017, Woven Gouache, 24 x 18
Patricia Fabricant’s work is a departure from her
previous work, which is abstract and pattern-oriented. Here Ms. Fabricant
presents vibrant self-portraits, which convey an immediacy and an emotional
tenor which she attributes to recent events in the political arena. On one wall
she has hung a series of self-portraits executed in gouache, which are highly
expressionistic and confrontational. On the facing wall, Ms. Fabricant has cut
similar paintings into strips and woven them together to create a new image,
which recalls the original image, but presents a new fragmented reality. The
emotions conveyed are shock, disbelief, anger, disgust, and a few others that
are less readily identified.
Anne Trauben, Gap Between The Puddles, 2017,
Oil Pastel on Paper, 56 x 44
Faced with the nearly impossible task of curating one’s
own work, Anne Trauben wisely
left the curatorial duties to James Pustorino for her participation in the
show. Comprised of both sculpture and drawing, Ms. Trauben presents a profoundly
beautiful body of work. Her drawings are not preparatory work for her
sculptures but, rather, are strong works that stand alone. A deft hand with her
materials lends a cohesion to her work that might otherwise suffer in its
diversity. Aleatory process is a large part of Ms. Trauben’s work. Her large, wall-sized drawings combine intensity with chance operation. Included are works comprised of wire, which Ms. Trauben considers another form
of line, as well as clay pieces both on and off the wall. A particularly moving
work is “Constellation 1 (for Margaret)" composed of several dish like forms made of porcelain which are installed on the wall in what seem to recall a constellation or perhaps asteroids in space.
The divergent ideas of what might comprise beauty provide a lively and well-considered viewing experience. One can easily imagine each of these artists extending their artistic vision well beyond the limits of this show.
Bold and Beautiful, 3/10/17 - 4/8/17, at Drawing Rooms features installation, painting, sculpture, and drawing by Ben Pranger, David French, Jill Scipione, Thomas Lendvai, Cecile Chong, Andra Samelson, Patricia Fabricant and Anne Trauben. The exhibit is curated by Anne Trauben.
Bruce Halpin is an artist living in Jersey City. Read Bruce's bio here and view his artwork here.
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