Pat Steir 

Two Blues, 2013

oil on canvas

84 x 84 inches

Pat Steir Gold and Gold and Silver Locks Gallery

Pat Steir

Gold and Gold and Silver, 2010

Oil on Canvas

84 x 84 inches

Warren Rohrer

Settlement: Green to Violet, 1981

oil on linen

60 x 60 inches

Sean Scully

Landline Plain, 2017

oil on aluminum

85 x 75 inches

Sean Scully

8.1.15, 2015

pastel on paper

22 1/2 x 30 inches

Lee Ufan Locks Gallery Painting

Lee Ufan

From Winds, 1983

pigment on canvas

63 3/4  x 51 1/8 inches 

Untitled, 1983

pigment suspended in glue on canvas

63 5/8 x 51 1/4 inches

Liliane Tomasko

Song of Gravity, 2016
oil and acrylic spray on linen
85 x 75 inches

Press Release

 

 

 

The past 60 years have seen the tide of abstract painting ebb and flow. Its time of death is called every few decades followed by a revival of representational art, the breakneck pace of technology, or the fickleness of the market. And yet, it is miraculously revived every so often—ostensibly for the first time. In its ineffability, it resists communion with contemporary fashion—refusing to serve as a cultural mirror or temporal guide. It is a language forged through materiality, negotiated agency, and distance. As a genre, “abstract painting” connects a rich genealogy of artists united by an ever-evolving syntax of vernaculars that weave a grand tradition only to splinter and reknot in unknowable formation. Taking its name from the work of early 20th century British poet, artist, and futurist, Mina Loy, Catch It & Lose It seeks a space between certainty and ambiguity, allowing the astonishing breadth of contemporary abstraction to propagate unhindered.

In her poem, “Human Cylinders,” Loy muses, “Absence of corresponding between the verbal sensory//And reciprocity//Of conception//And expression//Where each extrudes beyond the tangible//One thin pale trail of speculation,” presciently predicts the latency of form, materiality, concept and temporality that abstraction has grappled with since its beginnings. Catch It & Lose It ruminates on the relationship between two distinct groups of abstraction. The first exemplifies abstraction as a constructed language determined by painting’s conceptual and performative girding: works which “catch it.” The second selection details the release of agency from the artist and structured the clarity of language to an amorphous transcription of meditation: works which “lose it.” This is not to say that either camp provides a straightforward answer to questions posed about the significance or intent of abstract painting, but rather one that exemplifies the complexity of suchthe  syntactical compositions.

The works of Pat Steir, Bernard Frize, Lee Ufan, and Warren Rohrer resonate with each artist’s careful calculations, machinations which deliver them to a plane of abstraction beyond the visual and conceptual realm. The works of Pat Steir are understood as alchemic reactions in which the distillation of the artist’s agency, the medium’s materiality, and physical forces of nature intermingle to produce an arcane vocabulary of drips and splatters which might harbor the formula for the prima materia. Similarly, Bernard Frize’s robust oeuvre of mutable styles and highly orchestrated compositions exemplify the natural emergence of a new visual language through a symbiotic marriage between careful invention and welcome disruption. These works cultivate a complex linguistic structure and then fracture them, breaking them down to their purest form through meticulous strokes and organized exchange with their material environment. In contrast, works by Sean Scully, Sadie Benning, Liliane Tomasko and John Armleder illustrate a rigorous adherence to the formal quality of their abstraction, catching the essence of their linguistic motivation and solidifying it on the canvas. For Sean Scully, simplified compositions of banded pigments are the result of years spent investigating light, color and form, breaking down those components and reorganizing them through deliberate, sensual strokes. John Armleder’s practice developed out of the Ecart Group and Fluxus movements, shaping a language that is unclassifiable and transformative. His dynamic style reflects on the artistic ennui of his generation, reinterpreting trends and styles reflexively and critically. These works are translations, ones which catch amorphous emotions and memories before relaying them through the artist’s unique syntactical formula.

Catch It & Lose It hosts these languages in common forum, allowing them to reverberate and intermingle in a cacophony that portrays the possibilities of form, style, and concept that emerge from these abstract pursuits. The exhibition will open on October 5, 2018 and run until November 24th. There will be an opening reception on Friday, October 5th from 5 – 7pm that will be free and open to the public.

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