Retinal Poetry
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"Fourier" (detail - courtesy Canton Museum) |
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"Archimedes" (detail - courtesy Canton Museum) |
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"Gauss" |
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"Boole" (top), and "Cachy" |
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"Riemann" |
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"De Laplace" |
By Tom Wachunas
“The eye can travel over the surface in a
way parallel to the way it moves over nature. It should feel caressed and
soothed, experience frictions and ruptures, glide and drift. One moment, there
will be nothing to look at and the next second the canvas seems to refill, to
be crowded with visual events.” - Bridget
Riley
EXHIBIT: Organized Ambiguity – Gridworks of David
Kuntzman / On view through July 21, 2019
at The Canton Museum of Art, 1001 Market Avenue North, Canton, Ohio /
330.453.7666 / Viewing hours: Monday – Closed; Tuesday - Thursday - 10am-8pm;
Friday - Saturday - 10am-5pm; Sunday - 1pm-5pm /
In the mid-1960s. the
emergence of Optical, or Retinal painting (named “Op Art” after the first major
New York show by Cleveland-based Julian
Stanczak in 1964) signaled a dramatic shift in thinking about the presence of
the painter’s hand – the unique, expressively charged mark – on a
two-dimensional plane. This new genre of abstraction essentially eschewed the
visceral, individualized painted gesture in favor of smooth surfaces and tight
compositional rigidity that often suggested associations with science or
technology. More importantly, Op Art embraced the physicality and psychology of
the very act of seeing. Op paintings
are often quite hypnotic in their playfulness, their sheer illusionism, their delightful
tendency to tease and disorient our perceptions.
In that capacity, David
Kuntzman is an inveterate trickster, a gamesman of the highest order. His
acrylic canvases, named after mathematicians, are multifocal gems of pictorial ambiguity
rendered with alluring exactitude. These are elaborate, complex fields – at
once dense and airy - of variably scaled grids that intersect, collide, or
otherwise overlap in contrasting angles. Vibrant patterns that dance, tilting
and teetering in elegant pirouettes.
Kuntzman is a remarkable colorist. His fully
saturated hues can produce a sensation of electrified oscillation. And for all
their architectonic precision and geometric solidity, the repeated motifs have
an uncanny life about them, a pulse. They breathe. All those intricate planes
are joined into retinal matrices of fascinating rhythms. They seem to float in
and out of focus in an implied infinity, as if carried on a cosmic wind. Even
his monochromatic paintings are imbued with subtle vacillations in illusory
light, reflected and refracted amidst indeterminate spatial depth.
Despite
appearances, I don’t think the ultimate goal of Kuntzman’s paintings was
limited to something so prosaic as meticulously painted grids. Beautiful as they are, the grids are simple
portals to a more transcendent aesthetic experience. In the end, it’s an
experience rising from an unfettered desire to be enthralled by the act, the event, of seeing. Kuntzman has articulated that experience with exquisite
finesse.
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