Thursday, March 19, 2009

Jacqueline Humphries



"I think that painting is a medium of thought. As a material it doesn't just bend to your will, you have to interact with it, grapple with it. Painting is thinking in material, the pleasure involved in externalizing something that's internal. But one also has to deal with the history — everything that's ever been done in painting; and then there's everything that we bring to it as viewers, all our own expectations, our personal history etc. And there's memory — you're never just dealing with the painting in front of you, but with all other paintings whether you're conscious of them or not. There is an a priori situation, which is integral to its quality as medium. So, painting is a kind of consciousness that we interact with. The mechanics of how that works sort of defy description. It's an immersion, you're inside of it and it's inside of you. It's the world reflected in a mud puddle."

Jacqueline Humphries
http://www.lacan.com/frameXXII7.htm

03.20.09 Collage on Paper

Bruce Pearson



"In the past, when I was doing my early abstract painting, it seemed to me that I was working with a closed system. Now, it seems that the more permission I give myself to find interesting material, the more I open up possibilities. The more possibilities I open up, the better the ideas become. There was an excellent survey exhibition of drawings in the mid-nineties at MoMA called "The Maximal Sixties." It showed that the era produced very strong figuration, very strong conceptual work and very strong abstraction, while also entertaining a large number of other artistic currents. The sixties was a period of great experimentation, not only in the visual arts but in music as well. Then came Minimalism, which as lovely as it can be, was this driven, puritan movement. It was about shutting down possibilities. Now, it seems to me, things are opening up again. There's the notion of new media and the resurgence of old media that is being interpreted in brand new ways. I think many, many artists today are being affected by these new possibilities."

Bruce Pearson
http://www.wburg.com/0102/arts/bruce.html

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

03.18.09 Graphite and Ink

Saturday, March 14, 2009

03.14.09 Graphite and Ink

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

David Reed



"Painting is the most corrupt, debased form of art and that is its strength and hope. It has possibilities now because it is impure. Painting is very good at absorbing influences. In Western culture it has had a grand symbiotic relationship with Christianity, and today it can have just as rich a relationship with technologies of mechanical and digital reproduction.

For a while it was thought that photography and other media of mechanical reproduction would kill painting. But now we know that the opposite has happened – instead photography gave painting new life, new possibilities. Painting is like the beloved, the enthralled, who has been bitten by the vampire of mechanical reproduction. Rather than killing painting, the vampire’s kiss has instead made painting immortal."

David Reed
Liquid Rubens: Rubens in Las Vegas
Talk at the Guggenheim Hermitage Museum, Las Vegas, NV 2006

Untitled, Acrylic on paper 12x9 in, 2009

Untitled, Acrylic on paper 12x9 in, 2009

Untitled, Acrylic on paper 12x9 in, 2009

Skitch, Acrylic on Canvas 18x12 in, 2009

Skip divided (first state), Acrylic on canvas 18x24 in, 2009

Friday, March 6, 2009

Eric Tucker



"The essence of my work is the indeterminacy of perception. I am interested in exploring visual perspective and the body’s physical awareness of objects. My sculptures are an investigation of the ambiguity of sight and the certainty of tactility. They are sites where visual sensation and physical presence lead to changing interpretations of space and volume. The sculptures present the dichotomy between illusory and literal spaces. Through these different ways of perception, linked with intuition and reasoning, we come to understand our environment and the things in it.”

Eric Tucker
Artist Statement