Thursday, February 9, 2012

Recalcitrant Mimesis at David B. Smith Gallery

We may have been skeptical about the new Clyfford Still Museum, but about the Liz Miller exhibition at the David B. Smith Gallery that Still’s work inspired, we are not. Miller uses cut paper and felt to create intricate pieces that walk a thin line between 2-dimensionality and 3-dimensionality, order and chaos, and delicacy and strength.

Taking Still’s bold and colorful abstract paintings as a point of departure, Miller has created a breathtaking installation that stands more than solidly on its own.   Consisting of giant pieces of cut felt that have been stretched and folded into bold ranges of color and intricate crevices and cavities, Miller’s installation spans the length of one wall of the gallery from ceiling to floor and creates an immersive environment that pulsates with chaotic energy.   The opposite wall is filled with plexi-glass boxes displaying labyrinthine paper constructions that at once invoke choreographed explosions, absurd Mardi-Gras masks, and un-identifiable solar bodies. The originality and meticulous execution of this work makes Recalcitrant Mimesis a must see.  The show is on exhibition at the David B. Smith Gallery through February 18.
 



More images of the work on show can be seen at the David B. Smith website.

On a side note...
Liz Miller’s artwork made us think of one of our favorite artist, Leslie Shows, whose large cut paper installation was exhibited at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts in San Francisco in 2009.  Check out some pictures of the piece and watch a short video about this amazing artist:
Leslie Shows "Dispay of Properties"



Leslie Shows "Dispay of Properties"

Leslie Shows "Dispay of Properties"

Leslie Shows "Dispay of Properties"


Sunday, February 5, 2012

Clyfford Still Museum- For Better or For Worse


Well, we finally made it to Denver’s newest major art museum.  Designed as a one-man shrine to the hugely influential and yet largely elusive abstract expressionist, the Clyfford Still Museum opened with much fanfare in December.
Clyfford Still Museum

Though it feels a bit irreverent to poo-poo any development in Colorado’s art offerings, we must admit that we have consciously put off this visit as long as we possibly could in hopes that we might be able to avoid publicly airing our less than enthusiastic sentiments.  Trust us, these thoughts do not come without a great deal of guilt; and here we must confide that we are looking over our shoulders and whispering nervously like children hatching an evil scheme as we write.  It’s not that we aren’t excited to have a large, expensive, and well-hyped new museum in town.  And, we certainly don’t HATE the thing- especially not the way that 36 year-old Carmen Tisch does.  In early January, Tisch was arrested at the museum after causing $10,000 worth of damage to a large iconic painting titled “1957-J-No. 2” by beating it with her fists and then pulling down her pants and rubbing her behind against the canvas just before falling on the floor and urinating on herself.  Wow- now that’s some hate!
Clyfford Still, 1957-J-No. 2
  
No, no, we certainly don’t hate it.  Maybe it’s best to say that the whole thing just leaves us feeling a bit ambivalent.  Still is unarguably one the most important American artists.  He played an instrumental role as an early pioneer of Abstract Expressionism, the art movement that put American artwork on the map in the 1950s and that contributed greatly to the creation of a distinct American artistic identity in the post-WWII period.  Still began developing his iconic style early in the development of the Ab-Ex movement and his large color-field paintings rival in beauty and importance those of Mark Rothko, Barnett Newman, and Hans Hoffman.  

Despite its historical importance and theoretical contributions to subsequent art movements, Abstract Expressionism has long been criticized by feminist and post-colonial critics for its elitist and patriarchal perspectives; and much writing has been dedicated to the machismo displayed by many of its male practitioners.  In many respects, Still may have lived up to the elitist and pretentious stereotype of the male Ab-Ex artist.  Despite his influence, Still became critical of the commercial art world soon after his rise to prominence and remained throughout his life fairly isolated from the larger Ab-Ex movement.   He was extremely selective in showing and selling his artwork; only allowing about 6% of the work to ever be sold, and refusing to participate in any public exhibitions between 1952 and 1959.  He also became increasingly insistent that his artwork should only been seen in highly specific contexts; and especially insisting that his paintings be seen solely with other Clyfford Still paintings. 

Upon his death in 1980 Still’s estate, which contained approximately 94% of his life’s production, was closed off to researchers and the public.  His will stipulated that the estate would be gifted to any city that would build a museum dedicated to the research and display of solely his artwork.  All of this leaves us in a bit of a conundrum.  Should the extraordinary emphasis that Still placed on the viewing context of his artwork be seen as the manifestation of a self-indulgent megalomaniac or as a brilliant precursor to contemporary concerns with immersive environments and site-specificity?  While Still’s work certainly has historical importance, does his work have enough contemporary relevance to merit the enormous financial investment that was required to realize this project?  And finally, while the museum holds an enormous collection, how long can a museum that displays only one man’s artwork really keep the viewer’s attention?  If you are a lover of Clyfford Still’s work, perhaps indefinitely; otherwise, maybe a visit or two will do.