Structured Intuitions
By Tom Wachunas
“What you see is
what you see.” - Frank Stella –
“The best works
are often those with the fewest and simplest elements…until you look at them a
little more, and things start to happen.”
- Clyfford Still –
EXHIBITION: Constructed Spaces: Paintings by George
Schroeder, on view at MAIN HALL ART GALLERY, KENT STATE UNIVERSITY AT STARK
(lower level of Main Hall), THROUGH SEPTEMBER 22. Gallery hours are Mon.-Fri.
11 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Saturday 10 a.m. to Noon
Things happen in
George Schroeder’s paintings. Or not. They speak. Or keep their secrets. Are
they generous revelations of knowable,
familiar things, or silent witnesses to mysteries? That would largely depend
upon viewers’ expectations, focus and intentionality in assessing the elegant
geometric abstractions that Schroeder offers.
First, the matter
of expectations. In closely observing public assessments of Modernist/Postmodernist
abstraction over the past 30 years or so, it has occurred to me that for many
viewers, non-objective painting often poses what might be insurmountable if not
divisive challenges. It seems to me that within this demographic there is the
idea that painters (indeed all artists?)
are somehow duty-bound to impart easily understandable or inspiring pictures
about our time and our world. Art as a user-friendly, cultural opiate. In this
digital era of instantaneously available knowledge, it’s easy to become all too
comfortable with not having to work very hard for our answers (or our
entertainment). We seem to be increasingly complacent if not downright lazy
when it comes to exercising our innate intellectual capacities. And to the
extent that those capacities become atrophied, our ability to recognize even
the possibility of experiencing emotional connections to abstract art is
likewise limited.
Now, the matter of
focus and intentionality. Sometimes we viewers can be a woefully undisciplined
lot as to the actual time we spend examining nonrepresentational art - the time
to do the work of really looking and
finally seeing. Failure to fully
engage our work of looking, which is
itself a voluntary discipline, is to deny ourselves the rewards of the pure
“art experience” that so many abstractionists (particularly Minimalists and
Color Field painters) have historically desired for us.
In his web site
statement, Schroeder writes, “My recent paintings are improvised, to some
degree, over a scaffold of vertical and horizontal lines. I put something down
and respond to it, trying one thing and another until I sense where the
painting wants to go.”
His “lines” can
just as well be read as juxtaposed planes, in high contrast, that interact in a
variety of ways. These interactions – intuitive decisions on the artist’s part,
certainly - imbue the paintings with a fascinating formal intelligence that
balances rhythmic movement with stillness. And amid all the precision of flat,
hard-edged geometric design there is also a richly subtle and playful spatial
balancing – a gentle pushing and pulling between positive and negative planes.
Stretch your
imagination a little further, and you could conceivably view these works as
uncomplicated melodies with strong, resonant harmonies. Schroeder’s spartan,
distilled palette of tinted grayish neutrals alternated with deeper blues and/or blacks is,
interestingly enough, neither morose nor threatening. Instead, the analogous schemes
are very effective in exuding something akin to contemplative musicality.
It’s a sensibility
additionally enhanced by Schroeder’s quietly regulated surfaces. He applies
acrylic paint with drywall blades or cardboard squeegees for a
controlled/controllable finish. There are no frenetic gestures, no impasto
brush marks, and nothing of the notoriously plastic patina that acrylics so
often deliver. The apparent rigidity of formal construction in these canvases is
softened by their ultra-matte look. Schroeder’s paint application allows for
delightfully integrated passages wherein the top skin of color has been
uniformly scraped away to reveal the grainy tactility of the canvas, tinted
earlier in the painting process with shadows of underlying colors.
What finally
emerges from these works is a lyrical architecture of sorts, heraldic in its
simplicity, and intuitively engineered to conjure moments of serene equilibrium.
Photos, top to
bottom: The City I, Citadel II, Untitled
(Cement)
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