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North
Fork / South Fork: East End Art Now
Parrish Art Museum
25 Job's Lane
Southampton, New York
631.283.2118
Part I: May 23- July 18,
2004
Part II: July 25- September 12, 2004
By JOE
FYFE
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Elizabeth Peyton
Orient 2003
oil on board, 10 x 8 inches
Collection of David and Monica Zwirner, New York |
Fairfield Porter
John MacWhinnie 1968
oil on canvas, 51 x 36 inches
The Parrish Art Museum, Southampton, N.Y., Gift of the Estate of
Fairfield Porter, 1980 |
This summer's exhibition
at the Parrish had a simple premise: to survey recent work by artists
who live and work at least part of the time on the eastern end of Long
Island. Figural imagery abounded: painted, photographed or painted but
derived from photographs. In the entire 2-part exhibition 29 out of
44 artists fall into one of these categories. There were also several
artists' choice segments. Part 1 had a section selected by Elizabeth
Peyton, which brought historical painters of eastern long island into
the show, including Fairfield Porter and William Merritt Chase.
Because of this, Fairfield Porter's beautiful, muffled portrait of John
MacWhinnie inadvertently dominates Part 1. Though not photo-based painter,
Porter absorbed the downbeat ambience of the box brownie snapshot, a
standard image-maker in the fifties and early sixties. The MacWhinnie
portrait looks back to the wan interiors of Vuillard and forward to
the painterly photographs of William Eggleston. Peyton, represented
by a landscape and a portrait, seems weak in comparison to Porter but
Porter may have looked a little underdone at first, too. In fact, Peyton's
work, like Porter's, reveals itself slowly. It is 2 weeks later as I
write this and I can still clearly recall her landscape painting. That
is the best test I know. It is made up of few marks, but they are amazingly
deft ones. Peyton avoids the 'Wow'. This may be the only job left for
painting: to be unassuming and slowly establish a permanent intimacy.
Jessica Craig-Martin's tough,
intelligent photograph, "Parrish Museum Benefit, Southampton,"
(2001) has a charm that belies its large scale, and is a reminder of
Porter's penchant for using just-after-dinner tables laden with flowers
as a motif.
On a Saturday evening in
July the writer and curator Klaus Kertess interviewed painter Jane Freilicher
as part of the lecture series that accompanied the exhibition. She strayed
from talking about her own work, (she had a large landscape of a Hampton
construction site in Part One) to supply a few choice art historical
mini-portraits: "Hans Hofmann was a combination of Santa Claus
and Richard Wagner". The poet and critic Frank O'Hara loved the
studios of artists, "He even loved to stretch paintings".
She characterized Fairfield Porter as being "terse": "He
would show up in your studio out of nowhere and not say anything, then
make one short comment, like, 'that's one of your side-to-side paintings'
and then disappear."
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Jane Freilicher
Landscape with Construction Site 2001
oil on linen, 70 x 80 inches
Courtesy Tibor de Nagy Gallery, New York
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In Part Two there was
an abundance of sensually direct paintings. Worthy works of sculpture
and installation were also on display, but what was ultimately
striking here was cross-criticism among the paintings.
Billy Sullivan's "Sirpa
Milk," a painting copied from his own photograph, depicts
a nude woman breakfasting on a bed in a hotel room. The painting
is predominantly white, but discreet intensities of color provide
the image with a subtle structure. Delicate smears of transparent
yellow enjoin details, such as the place between the pancake and
the plate on the room service tray, the creases in the frame on
the wall and the tuck of the towel around the neck of the nude
figure. Sullivan's decorative freedom, so amply present in this
work, contrasts with the murky photo-based paintings exhibited
by Chuck Close and Eric Fischl. These paintings underline the
pitfalls in maintaining the "look" of the photograph
to resolve the image.
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Jane Wilson's "Clouded Midnight," depicting a brooding night
sky, reveals, upon close examination, an electric orange underneath
the dominant indigo clouds. Mary Heilman installed a polychrome painting
with two chairs of her own design, rhyming one color from the painting
with a color used in the objects. Heilman's ensemble hit a note between
seriousness and whimsy, casual décor and reductive aesthetics.
Another kind of rhyming took place in the painting, "Everything,"
by David Salle, where a collection of common objects, such as hats,
flowers and fabric, established visual correspondences via similarities
in brushstrokes and appearances. The painting was a ruminative essay
of complex space, bright color and self-reflexive imagery.
JOE FYFE is contributing
editor to artcritical. As a painter, he represented by JG Contemporary
Art in NYC. He also writes regularly for Art in America, Art on Paper,
and Bomb.
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