HOME

THINK PIECES

BLURBS

BOOKCRITICAL

STUDIO VISIT

DAVID COHEN

OUR WRITERS

ABOUT US

 

back to current blurbs
   

Catherine Murphy

Lennon, Weinberg
560 Broadway
Suite #308
New York, NY 10012

September 22- November 3, 2001

Chris Moylan writes:

A hand blocks the landscape view in Catherine Murphy's painting "Backlit," recalling a gesture familiar from celebrity sightings and crime scenes:'no pictures!' The image of the hand, oversized and cropped at the frame, compels our interest. Backlit, the ridged flesh between thumb and forefinger is almost translucent, while the tilted columns of the fingers appear wittily massive and vibrant against the wisps of summer foliage behind them. The gold of the wedding ring is flecked with blue sky, the vertical lines of the stretched palm rhyme visually with the verticals of the grass and trees. Landscape and artisanal hand merge and separate, in a finely nuanced play on the Modernist dialectic of object and expectation-this is not a hand, yet it is.


Catherine Murphy Backlit 1999,
oil on canvas, 20 x 24 inches,
courtesy Lennon, Weinberg Gallery, New York

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Similarly, traces of a landscape show through the letters of "Cathy" (seen backwards) written on a fogged window, a beautifully immediate rendering of the frustration of peering through subjectivity to that which is being represented. Painting, in these works, seems haunted by an anticipatory nostalgia for the actual, the subject that constantly slips into change as the process-Murphy is known for taking months and years on her work-goes on. The crumbs scattered across a stained tablecloth in "The Windsor" suggest that if the artist at work must inevitably come late to the feast of sensual experience, this must suffice. And it does; the painting is at once intimate and forlorn, cerebral and keenly felt. Even paintings with a largely formal interest reveal an underlying tension.

The images of a hunting scene in"Wallpapered Corner" reverse and repeat on the vertical, playing abstractly on the geometric configurations of walls, trim and carpet, at the same time drawing us figuratively into a painted corner. But it is a lovely corner; why not stay there The puzzles of Murphy's work are nearly as seductive as the sensuality of their color, yet in her drawings one sees that something else is at work that transcends both. "Swept up," completed in 1999, gathers endless debates over representational art where they belong, in a carbon swirl of beautifully rendered dust. A drawing that nearly cost Murphy her eyesight asserts the exactitude and rigor of her vision.

blurb archives:

Louise Bourgeois, by Eric Gelber
Nina Bovasso, David Dupuis, & Andrew Masullo, by Chris Moylan
Renee Cox, by Chris Moylan
Tom Cramer, by Jeff Jahn
James Esber, by Drew Lowenstein
Leon Golub, by Eric Gelber
Marcus Harvey, by Chris Moylan
Roberto Juarez, by Eric Gelber
William Kentridge, by Eric Gelber
Penny Kronengold, by David Cohen
Michael Landy, by Leo Walford
Damon Lehrer, by Gregory Peterson
Catherine Murphy, by Chris Moylan
Graham Parks, by David Cohen
Paul Pfeiffer, by Franklin Sirmans
Qiu Shi-hua, by David Cohen
Scott Richter, by Abraham Ferraro
Julian Schnabel, by Eric Gelber
Joel Shapiro, by Eric Gelber
Socrates Sculpture Park, by Eric Gelber
Gary Stephan, by Drew Lowenstein
Torild Stray, by Jock Ireland
Sarah Sze, by Alexi Worth
Anne Truitt, by David Cohen
Rachel Whiteread, by David Cohen
Emily Young, by David Cohen