Auroral Substances
By Tom Wachunas
“…All great
paintings are sculptures – there’s so much of the actualness about it that a
great painting forces you into a visual, physical movement of yourself. That’s
what determines the way you experience a painting kinetically. You move closer,
you sight down it, you tilt your head, you step back, you feel as though you
are in it. That being in it is just as important as looking from a
distance.” - painter Kenneth Noland
“My visual world,
though rarely depictive of any specific subject matter, is usually grounded in
dynamic, primordial natural forms, especially elements of the human body. The
microcosm that is the curvature of an arm may end up evoking the macrocosm of a
sweeping imaginary landscape. My paintings often call to mind the rich colors
and textures of the earth.” -
painter Annette Poitau
EXHIBIT: Annette Poitau, abstract oil
paintings, at Journey Art Gallery, 431 4th Street NW, downtown
Canton, THROUGH JANUARY 4, 2014. Gallery hours are Tues. and Thurs. Noon to 6
p.m., Wed., Fri., & Sat. Noon to 9 p.m., Sun. 1 to 5 p.m. until after the
holidays. www.journeyartgallery.com
From a distance,
the oil paintings by Annette Poitau have something of a family resemblance to
the very large abstract Color Field “stain” paintings of Helen Frankenthaler or
the “Veil” series of Morris Louis, among others. But come closer to Poitau’s
more intimately-scaled surfaces (and yes, do “…sight down it,… tilt your head,
…step back…”) and you’ll be engaged with a different visual dynamic altogether.
Whereas the aforementioned
abstractionists intended their translucent layers of pigment be “at one with”
the canvas as opposed to sitting on top, Poitau’s undulating, intensely
saturated hues become physical topographies that seem to emerge from subtle,
liquid underlayments. These brilliant visions are a hypnotic merging of the
material with the ethereal. To some, they might suggest at once spectacular
earthen formations and atmospheric phenomena.
In her statement
quoted above, Poitau refers to this suggestive quality in her work as evocative
of landscape. Keep in mind, though, that “evoking” is a concept wholly separate
from “imitating” in the representational sense. And herein is a capacity unique
to this particular kind of nonobjective abstraction: The power to conjure
essences, or ineffable energies, freed from identifiable subjects.
If I understand Poitau’s
methodology correctly, briefly described on her web site at www.annettepoitau.com, she allows the
varying viscosities in her layers of paint to interact in ways that produce the
sensation of motion in shifting planes or “clouds” of color. Call it a controlled
abandon, or a surrender to the properties of paint to do what it will naturally
do. Remarkable, minute details can surface, as in the upward movement of
feathery green rivulets in the lower portion of her painting titled Vague.
Overt brushwork is a minimal presence in
the flowing, spontaneous feel of these paintings. There is occasional evidence
of intentional action (or “drawing”) by Poitau’s hand. But it’s neither an
overly fussy disruption of the visual gestalt, nor an unnecessary afterthought.
The three ghostly, greenish horizontal trails through the surface in one of the
untitled paintings (hanging in the classroom area of the gallery), for example,
are but a gentle intrusion. Such gestural moments are a poetic reminder,
perhaps, that the auroral glow of these works is indeed of human origin.
Regardless of the objective
realities we might discern these works as somehow describing, I think the
primary subject matter here is paint itself. The strength and appeal of this
exhibit is in Poitau’s apparent gift for investing something so inherently
inanimate – paint – with such astonishing vitality.
PHOTOS, courtesy
Su Nimon at Journey Art Gallery (from top): Vague,
oil on canvas, 34”x60”; Untitled, oil on board, 50”x27”; Untitled, oil on
canvas, 36”x48”
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