Painted Cities
Vicki Wulff, Darshan Russell, David Konigsberg, Eileen Murphy, Arthur Hammer, Tona Wilson, Judith Wyer, Jessica Houston, Marlene Wiedenbaum, Bill Clutz, Dan Rupe, Tony Thompson, Paul Chojnowski,
Kate Knapp, Richard Baumann, Staats Fasoldt, Ashley Cooper, Bill Sullivan, Margaret Crenson, Colleen Kiely, Richard Merkin, William Bond Walker, Edward Avedisian, and Joan Griswold
March 4, 2010 through April 11, 2010

By Mollie Flannery
Carrie Haddad Gallery is pleased to announce the exhibition, Painted Cities, featuring works from twenty one artists in a wide range of media, including watercolors, pastels, oils, graphite rubbings, burned paper, and acrylics. The exhibit will be on view from
Featured Artists: Vicki Wulff, Darshan Russell, Robert Koffler, David Konigsberg, Eileen Murphy, Arthur Hammer, Tona Wilson, Judith Wyer, Ashley Cooper, Jessica Houston, Marlene Wiedenbaum, Bill Clutz, Dan Rupe, Tony Thompson, Paul Chojnowski, Kate Knapp, Richard Baumann, Staats Fasoldt, Margaret Crenson, Colleen Kiely, Richard Merkin, William Bond Walker, Bill Sullivan and Edward Avedisian.
William Bond Walker, in his mixed media drawing entitled “The City,” depicts an unknown place, a swarm of passing moments and moving bodies. This is his vision of the essence of city life, in which transience is accompanied by a feeling of betrayal: the individual perceives the city as a force hostile to him or herself. In
Those artists who downplay the ubiquity and persistence of change tend to lend ephemera a sense of permanence; their project, in part, is to immortalize the fleeting moment. Three paintings by Judith Wyer fit this mold. In her representations of pedestrians in transit—crossing the street amidst dense traffic, waiting for the train’s arrival—the atmosphere is thick and the figures solid. The heaviness of bodies and movement resists the immediacy of Wyer’s subject matter, presenting a dichotomy between subject and representation. In “Traffic,” the artist’s sculptural and simplified rendering imparts a formality, a sense of purpose to the woman’s leaden stride. These figures possess gravity and importance; they read like statues. The paintings evoke the experience of an overwhelming spell of mindfulness, in which sensitive and focused perception takes over: the unremarkable event before one’s eyes acquires an unexpected vividness, and its appearance is burned into memory.
Wyer portrays moving bodies as stone, giving the moment a certain weight and stability; Margaret Crenson, on the other hand, preserves its immediacy. In a juicy oil painting entitled “Catskill Creek,” Crenson captures the dynamism of a body of water, suggesting its rapid flow and its shimmering reflection of the light of the sky. Paul Chojnowski achieves a similar effect in three “fire drawings,” in which the artist employs a flame to delimit space. In “Untitled Nocturne,” gross abstractions yield a strikingly realistic image. Soft disks of light deftly establish composition and articulate the work’s chiaroscuro: these luminous forms emerge amidst deep blacks and glowing sepias, describing illuminated skyscraper windows, car headlights, streetlamps. The light pulsates; its movement and dynamism are palpable, as is the sense of impending and constant change.
Many of the artists whose work is featured in Painted Cities employ their artistic mediums in an architectural manner. As much of the conceptual content of the exhibition is made up of architecture, this manner of handling form forges an intimate connection between artistic process and subject matter. Richard Bauman, in “Gloucester Boat Yard,” builds up and sculpts paint, lending this work a palpable tactility. The strength and boldness of the boat in the foreground forces the surrounding landscape into the distance. The boat acquires a structural soundness—real volume and mass that indicate Bauman’s sensitivity to the design and anatomy of a structure. Marlene Wiedenbaum shows a similar concern with form and mass in “Gum, Moscow,” a pastel piece in which a troubled woman—her eyes spilling deep distress—waits in line at the well-known Soviet Russian department store, GUM. This woman bears the only defined face and disposition in an indeterminate sea of shoppers that floods the inside of this massive building. The rational contours of the gaping interior space anchor the composition. Wiedenbaum transcribes the structure’s ornate interior with an almost obsessive attention to detail, imparting a realistic sense of weight and magnitude.
In the paintings of Arthur Hammer, the artist’s emulation of the architectural process is laid bare. Hammer’s affinity for architecture is evident in his repetition of linear marks. Vertical lines redolent of pillars compose the composition of “Waiting for the Train to Come In,” and function as markers of perspective and distance. They evoke the bones of a building, the near-indestructible posts that the façade eventually veils. Here, in Hammer’s painting, these pervasive pillar-like forms serve to uphold the paintings composition, and the two-dimensional surface becomes a metaphor for an architectural space.
Tona Wilson constructs convincing space in “Cells 2,” a monochrome mixed-media piece that offers a grim vision of a future environment in which whole populations dwell in a series of tiny cells, the walls of which are composed of commodities.