Art in America - March 2016_

(Brent) #1

34 MARCH 2016 CRITICAL EYE


horizon or a “true” vertical, while it’s disruptive to attend
to the way space curves around us. At easel-size, the
flat, rectangular picture plane provides a homogeneous
unity, which over centuries has become an unnoticed
convention, though it simplifies the complications of
actual vision. By attaching sculptural forms to the wall
and presenting them as paintings, Stella interrupts this
comfortable unity. Though abstract objects, these works
direct the eye along multiple angled, swooping and
overlapping picture planes. I’d argue that they realize in
three dimensions the multiple points of view of Analytic
Cubism—something like the physiological graphing of
eye movements during perception. The international
success of Frank Gehry and Zaha Hadid suggests that a
formal revolution is under way that has progressed faster
in architecture, product design and science than in studio
art. Radical form-givers in many fields have moved away
from post-and-lintel organization toward more organic,
visually dynamic shapes and relationships.
To call a Stella construction florid and undisciplined
suggests a dismissive distaste for curving forms. Stella’s
K.81 combo(2009), part of the “Scarlatti K” series, creates
a complex vortex of views. A huge piece anchored to the
wall and floor, it extends some 10 feet into the viewer’s
space. Colored curves of Protogen RPT (a plastic resin
used in 3-D printers) twist around crisscrossing stainless
steel tubes. Similarly, the openness and deeply projecting
space of a work likekandampat (2002) make it hard to

“Arbitrariness” reflects Stella’s departure from a reduc-
tive modernist endgame. In the 1970s, Stella violated Clem-
ent Greenberg’s notion of a purely optical color field with
actual three-dimensional complications. (Stella wasn’t alone
in literally breaking the optical field: Flowers’ New York
gallery, for example, smartly reprised Richard Smith’s seg-
mented Kite paintings from the ’70s during this retrospec-
tive.) In his series “Exotic Birds” (1976-80), Stella attached
cutout curves of painted aluminum to wire mesh grounds.
By the end of the ’70s, these gaps between the painted plates
were arguably having more influence on Neo-Expressionists
than abstract painters, as Julian Schnabel, for example, began
painting over broken crockery, and Anselm Kiefer over straw.
Both Stella’s “Exotic Birds” and his “Indian Birds” (1977-
79) are abstract, but their jumps of color suggest flashes
of wings among clusters of foliage—far from rigorously
non-referential Minimalism. The baroque representational
compositions that Philip Pearlstein was making by 1982
have more in common with Stella’s 1981 “Circuit” series—
reliefs made up of thickets of separate curvilinear planes—
than with the neoclassicism of figurative contemporaries like
Alfred Leslie or William Bailey. In works by both Stella and
Pearlstein, complex shapes project forward into the viewer’s
space with dynamic counter-sliding diagonals.

“CRAZY,” “WACKY ”—their opposite, probity, is still
defined with synonyms like “uprightness” and “rectitude.”
It’s instinctual to cling to the classical stability of a straight

View of “Frank
Stella: A
Retrospective,”
showing (left to
right)Gobba, zoppa
e collotorto, 1985;
Chodorow II, 1971;
andSt. Michael’s
Counterguard,



  1. Courtesy
    Whitney Museum of
    American Art,
    New York. Photo
    Ronald Amstutz.

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