Showing posts with label abstract. Show all posts
Showing posts with label abstract. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Richard Bottwin's Wall Sculptures

Richard Bottwin

Richard Bottwin Wall Sculpture
Parallel #1, 2006, 14" x  8.5" x  9"
Macassar Ebony on Birch Plywood, Acrylic Paint
from richardbottwin.com
I recently read the article A few highlights from the 2012 DUMBO Arts Festival on Two Coats of Paint which introduced me to the art of Richard Bottwin.  His wall sculptures are fresh takes on motifs from modernist painting/reductive abstraction.  His works are strictly non-objective, emphasizing color and form but lacking the dogmatic Greenbergian trait of flatness which suspiciously speaks to the essence of the business aspect of art rather than the "essence of a painting" (A flat painting can be mass produced as a commodity).  Also, rather than the pieces being strictly autonomous and fixed from any vantage point, the perspective of the viewer plays a key role in experiencing the piece.
Richard Bottwin Wall Sculpture
Profile #2, 2008 16" x 13.5" x 13"
Acrylic Color and Zebrawood Veneer on Birch Plywood
Vantage Point #1, from richardbottwin.com
"The surfaces, laminated with wood veneers or painted with acrylic colors, are configured to reveal surprising shapes and patterns with shifts in the viewer's perspective.  A sense of disorientation, implied weightlessness and the element of surprise are created by the reductive forms and subvert the modernist vocabulary of the simple constructions." - Richard Bottwin

Richard Bottwin Wall Sculpture
Profile #2, 2008 16" x 13.5" x 13"
Acrylic Color and Zebrawood Veneer on Birch Plywood
Vantage Point #2, from richardbottwin.com

Wednesday, September 5, 2012

Artist Overview: Kaz Oshiro


Kaz Oshiro's Still Lifes

The emergence of Kaz Oshiro's stretched canvas works represents a paradigm shift in the world of still-life painting.  Like Robert Ryman before him, Oshiro's work focuses on the real experience of painting.  Unlike Ryman however, the real experience of painting begins with the construction of the canvas.  The problem is not worked out on the surface of the canvas, but in the three dimensional realm.  The piece below, Untitled Still Life, is exemplary of this approach.  The work is what it is, similar to the approach taken by Isa Genzken in relation to the still-life.
A painting of Kaz Oshiro's
Source: Contempory Art Daily
"I thought that by making an object out of a canvas I’d be able to achieve what I want to do, which is practice making things physically. But at the same time, I wouldn’t have to explain much: it’s a still life sitting on the floor. It’s a painting." -Kaz Oshiro, Kaz Oshiro's "Painting Problem"

Simulacram

Source: Yvon Lambert
The majority Oshiro's work can be seen as simulacra of everyday objects.  His paintings remain humble; his goal is not to transform the found object into an art object.  Inversely, Oshiro takes the elevated status of Pollock's canvas and quietly places it back on the ground, so to speak.  He uses traditional objects from the realm of painting (stretchers, canvas, and paint) and transforms them into what reads at first glance as an everyday object.  After closer inspection though, the viewer realizes that it the object is a hyperrealistic three-dimensional representation of that object. 

an installation by Kaz Oshiro
Source:  http://artsceneseen.tumblr.com
The image that is painted on each two dimensional surface is exactly that: a duplication of the surface being represented (which could stand alone as an abstract painting). It is only in the greater context that the illusion is created: Oshiro's works are "real illusions."  If each canvas was placed alone on a wall all that would remain would be a weak attempt at capturing the sublime.  Gestalt: the whole is greater than the sum of its parts.
Source: Galerie Perrotin