The Goo of PaintHow every mark mattersBY JENNIFER COATES``````JASON STOPA``````represented a wide array of phenomenaRYHUWKHFHQWXULHV³OLJKWÃHVKZHDWKHU³and the way itâs wielded can both augmentand undermine the subjects it depicts.The artists I discuss here all exploit thereferential potential of the painterlygesture, revealing how elastic paint canbecome in the service of meaning.Nicole Eisenmanâs work in the midaughts underwent a transformation thatwas roughly contemporaneous with therise of Schutz. Eisenmanâs style openedup; while her canvases still had a socio-political bite, they were also more about adirect celebration of and immersion inpaint itself. Consider Little Shaver, 2005:The shaving-cream-coated face of a manis encroached upon by a woman who leansin to kiss him and nick him in the neck.$WLQ\LQWHUORSHUÃJXUHVTXDWVRQWKHmanâs head, peeing rudely on his ear. Theshaveeâs visage is itself like the surface of``````WHEN I FIRST saw Dana Schutzâs Sneeze,2001, I felt liberated, excited aboutpaintingâs potential; she played with themediumâs history without being seriousor chilly. Schutz skillfully merged thecomplex genre of the portrait with AbstractExpressionism, all via the germ-expelling,body-shaking experience of a commonsneeze. It was as if Willem de KooningâsWomanZDVXSGDWHGDQGFULWLTXHGthrough an irrepressible allergic reaction.At the time, I had just read MiraSchorâs seminal essay âFigure/Groundâand recalled the feminist, painterly battlecry to acknowledge the bodily, the gooof paint, in any accounting of art history.Schor cemented my belief that paintingis not a disadvantaged relation to themain narrative of recent art history but,rather, a malleable, powerful way toUHÃHFWFXOWXUHDQGFRQVFLRXVQHVV3DLQWis an alchemical shape-shifter that has``````a painting: The cream, the blood, and thepee are the pigment, while the small impâsvagina and the razor, wielded by women,are the implements that stain, groom, andwound the implacable protagonist. Inshort: The woman is the painter; the man,the canvas. The composition recalls JudithSlaying HolofernesVSHFLÃFDOO\WKHHDUO\1600s version by Artemisia Gentileschi,in which Judithâs handy knife work bringsviolent red spurts from her male victimâsneck. Female revenge culminates in bloodyribbons; both the man and the pictureEUHDNGRZQLQWRYLVFRXVOLTXLGAngela Dufresne has likewise beenLQÃXHQFHGE\WKH*HQWLOHVFKLKRUURUVKRZShe deploys wild and loose brushworkthat often breaks free of its purely descrip-tive duties in order to behave just like pee,ejaculate, or blood, working in the mightytradition of dismantling the picture andthe patriarchy. In her painting Death ofSilence, or Jean-Louis Trintignant, 2013,the decapitated head of a man rests in apool of blood; red spatters cover his face andthe white sheet beneath him. For Dufresne,depicting violence becomes an opportunityto play with her materials. The connectionbetween murder and painting might be adeep one: The bloody remains on ancientVDFULÃFLDOVWRQHVODEVFRXOGEHXQGHUVWRRGas the earliest Abstract ExpressionistSDLQWLQJV3HRSOHZHUHQ·WMXVWVODXJKWHUHG³their remains were sprayed within theFRQÃQHVRIDVDFUHGUHFWDQJOH$WWHQWLRQmust have been paid to the aestheticGLVWULEXWLRQRIJRRH\LQQDUGVRQDÃDWsurface. (Vienna Actionist Hermann Nitschmade this connection between ritual killingand painting with his immersive orgiasticperformances involving dead animals,HQWUDLOVDQGERGLO\ÃXLGVDQGODUJHVFDOHSDLQWLQJVVSODWWHUHGZLWKUHGVDQGEURZQV3DLQWFRQQHFWVHDVLO\WRWKHFRUSRUHDO2IFRXUVH-DFNVRQ3ROORFNWXUQHGSDLQW·Vpropensity to unspool in wet skeins into aheroic and physical event, with chaoticgestures that changed the understandingof what a painting could be. But actionpainting has a centuries-old predecessorin Fra Angelicoâs faux marble panelsthat are situated below the Madonnaof Shadows at the San Marco monastery
ON CRAFT // JENNIFER COATES54 MODERN PAINTERS JUNE/JULY 2016BLOUINARTINFO.COM
martin jones
(Martin Jones)
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