Phyllis Tuchman, Artisanal Abraction: The Elusive, Effusive Art of Amy Sillman, ARTnews, February 16, 2018

Similar documents
Matt Mullen, The Playfully Troubled Art of Amy Sillman, Interview Magazine, January 25, 2018 AMY SILLMAN IN BROOKLYN, JANUARY 2018.

Educators Resource. Amy Sillman: Landline 28 September January 2019

Jennifer Samet, Shape Shifting and Body Politics: Amy Sillman at Bard College, Hyperallergic, August 9, 2014

Intentional Painting Planner

Witnessing Ed Clark s Balancing Act at Tilton Gallery The wordless meaning of the show only slowly reveals itself.

Pearly White. An interview with Clive Head by Rosalyn Best

Artist Studies h Vincent van Gogh

The Whole is the Sum of its Parts. I can still recall my reaction upon first seeing a Chuck Close painting. It

Michaël Borremans. Trickland. February 13 March 8, Where is Ned? 2002 Oil on Wood 8.74 x 7.95 inches 22.2 x 20.

Existing in a place between the palpable and the

IMPORTANT: DO NOT REVEAL TITLES UNTIL AFTER DISCUSSION!

2. A painting of fruit, flowers or insects is called. 3. Paintings made from millions of tiny coloured dots are typical of the style.

East City Art Reviews: Always Into Now at the Torpedo Factory

ALL PHOTOS BY LEAH WALKER.

I m working with and against painting an interview with Amy Sillman Imelda Barnard 26 SEPTEMBER 2018

Tips & Techniques for using Fisher 400 Paper

Trenton Doyle Hancock On 20 Years of His Fantastical Cartoon Drawings

A Lifetime of Sketchbooks from Postwar Painter Richard Diebenkorn

MICHAEL BEVILACQUA AT GERING & LÓPEZ GALLERY

An annual art competition for schools in Fife organised by the Museum of the University of St Andrews.

Metaphysical Abstraction

Pam Rosenblatt Artist David Foss and Enjoying the process of art

Letha Wilson Part I, Artists Space 1

Standards Content Skills Assessments

PAINTING ADKINS, GLENNA CHENAULT, BARBARA COLE, BERNARD COLLINS, DEREK COLLINS ART STUDIO DISNEY, ROGER. Booth 52. Booth 90. Booth 108.

In An NYC Stairwell, One of Keith Haring s Murals May Be In Peril, NPR, September 6, 2016

Visual Communication: Basics of Drawing Appendix 1. Synopsis This module is meant as an introduction to the basic elements in drawing.

All works must be 9x12 inches and matted 12x16 inches pm

ArtRage App Manual. Click here for ArtRage website

Henri Matisse drawings on display at Mount Holyoke

Watch Ron s video explaining his class and the supplies you ll need.

A Finding Aid to the Wayne Thiebaud Papers, , in the Archives of American Art

Chapter 2.2: Media. Tools and Materials Artists Use

Use #Createitkit to share you and your family s creativity on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram!

Comparative Observational Studies: Two Upper East Side Museums

V5.02. Augmented Imagination: Machine Learning Art as Automatism. Philipp Schmitt

Artist photo: Roshanak

ART PROJECT for San Antonio College (TX) by the Student: Stephanie Hanus 2003/2004

ABOUT THE ARTIST Bold, eye-popping colors and repetitive shapes (like stripes and targets) characterize contemporary New York-based artist Polly

WILLEM DE KOONING THE FIGURE: MOVEMENT AND GESTURE Paintings, Sculptures, and Drawings

Faisal Babajan. art & design - Artist Focus

tania rollond a flickering moment

David M. Kessler Fine Art

Many thanks to our Presenting Partners: This event is proudly brought to you by: Many thanks to our Educational Sponsor. Charity number

SUMMER CAMPS AND PROGRAMS SOUTH SURREY. artsumbrella.com/summer. Week 1: Jul 2 6 Week 2: Jul 9 13 Week 3: Jul 16 20

5 January 2017 Cynthia Cruz

The shadow of perception

June /07/2017 Contesting Perspectives With David Hockney In Lithographs 0 COMMENTS ART & DESIGN (/SECTION/ART-DESIGN) / 28

THE VISUAL WORLD Important terms & ideas from Sayre, Chapters 1-3

January 15, :30-8:45 PM Richardson Public Library. Janis Krendick PASTEL. California Light. Spring White Rock Lake.

The Elements of Art line color value texture shape form space

Art Market Report. The Art of the Move: Bringing Uptown Downtown HOLLIS TAGGART GALLERIES

Perhaps what drives me to photograph what. Shadows of Light photographs and text by Rose-Lynn Fisher

TAMUNA SIRBILADZE ( )

LESSON PLAN: Exploring Painting By Amy Wunsch, November 2008

ARTPRIZE FAMILY ACTIVITY KIT

(

Paint Neat Edges. on Zebra Stripes. Draw a Symmetrical Zebra Face

Taking It All In 60 x 36 Acrylic on Stretched Canvas, Gallery Mat $3,800. No Ordinary Moment

TOOLS AND MATERIAL. Practical Guidelines (Secondary Level) Tools and Material. Notes

Fairy Tale #5 The Twelve Brothers. Fairy Tale #5: Mixed Media. The Twelve Brothers

Kahlo By Andrea Kettenmann READ ONLINE

Painting Supplies. for Beginners. Painting Surfaces. Canvas Boards

GAGOSIAN GALLERY. John Elderfield on Painted on 21st Street: Helen Frankenthaler from 1950 to John Elderfield, Sam Cornish

YEAR 7 Visual Arts. Self-Portraiture

Jack Whitten: Erasures

The Second Generation Abstract Expressionist, Ed Clark

Talent. Understanding. Insight into myths about art and artists. ArtSpeak

UNIT 1 (of 5): Line (16 hours = 1 credit)

Open College of the Arts Tutor report

LESSON PLAN: Abstract Art By Heather Lamanno Lough, June 2012

April 8th: Well the best ideas do not always work. I have found that working each feather individually simply too tedious for no good reason. I am a p

Elements Of Art Study Guide

Rita Ackermann Interview

Tips for making sketches after nature adriaans.com/on- painting/lessons- english-.html

Beacons Proximity UUID, Major, Minor, Transmission Power, and Interval values made easy

IB VA COMPARATIVE STUDY

Katherine Bradford and the Bigger Picture. by John Yau on August 18, 2013

Diane Jaquith What Were You Thinking? NAEA 2016

Mega Markers Pear Artwork

Visual Arts What Every Child Should Know

GAGOSIAN. Hans Ulrich Obrist. Katharina Grosse, Sarah Sze, and Hans Ulrich Obrist. Photo by: Julien Gremaud

E D U C A T I O N A r t C l a s s e s a n d P r o g r a m s SUMMER 2018

1991 by Faith Ringgold

PACK YOUR PARFLECHE! LESSON PLAN

Masterworks Realism. On view. APPLETON MUSEUM OF ART, College of Central Florida FROM THE INTERNATIONAL GUILD OF

100 Paintings of Mickey Mouse by a Color-Blind Pop Artist by Dave Bossert

SOL LEWITT. a d a m. e: 24 CORK STREET LONDON W1S 3NJ t:

Artists at Work: Up close and personal By MARSHA FOTTLER, Correspondent

Painter Deborah Kass looks back on her two-decade career

Exploring the Art and History of Printmaking

INERTIA: STUDIO VISIT WITH NY BASED PAINTER LEIGH RUPLE AMY BOONE- MCCREESH MAY 4, 2017

things to come Limited Edition on Canvas Edition Size: x30 895

Getting Ready to Sew

Parts to Whole. Miriam Svidler. IP Thesis. Section 001. April 20, 2011

Hello.. Richard Scott Studio Works

Born in 1975 in Kelowna, British Columbia (Canada) Lives and work in New York city

Kindle The Elements Of Drawing

Richard Diebenkorn 'The Green Huntsman,' x 69.5", oil on canvas, 1952

Gilles Dyan Founder and Chairman Opera Gallery Group

Transcription:

Phyllis Tuchman, Artisanal Abraction: The Elusive, Effusive Art of Amy Sillman, ARTnews, February 16, 2018 Installation view of Amy Sillman: Mostly Drawing, 2018, at Gladstone 64, New York. Amy Sillman has always treated the act of drawing as an equal to her sister arts, painting and sculpture. For starters, Sillman s drawings are not preparatory studies. She is not designing diagrams for future projects nor is she working out technical issues. You also can t say this is what she does in her

down time while the paint on her canvases dries. For this 63-year-old artist from the Midwest, drawing is a complicated, time-consuming, independent endeavor. The 25 works on paper in Amy Sillman: Mostly Drawings, on view at Barbara Gladstone s uptown outpost on East 64th Street in New York through March 3, are a case in point. Displayed in a line that rings five walls, they offer a thrilling, rollercoaster-like experience to visitors to the former townhouse designed by starchitect Edward Durrell Stone. As Bette Davis character once put it, Fasten your seat belts, it s going to be a bumpy night. Each drawing is a unique banquet of colors, lines, and shapes. Because she s mixed her palette s pigments, her yellows, greens, and blues are unexpected blends, not as familiar as they would have been straight from the tube. And her shapes are neither organic nor geometric. They re open-ended and elusive. Her work has more in common with an ugly duckling than a graceful white swan. Sillman herself has written perceptively about the awkward character of her effusive art. As she sees it, It s no accident that people use awkward after a faux pas, a moment of tension between the ideal Amy Sillman, SK30, 2017, acrylic, ink, and silkscreen on paper.

and the real, where what s supposed to happen goes awry. For Sillman, That tension is what abstraction is partly about: the subject no longer entirely in control of the plot, representation peeled away from realness. Sillman s latest drawings are multi-media affairs, executed with acrylic paint, ink, and silkscreens. But she doesn t begin by applying yellow, green, or black to blank sheets of paper with a brush, a pen, or a squeegee. At the outset, there s the matter of scale. Sillman recently told me, Drawing has to start with your writing hand. You build out. With few exceptions the artist cited Richard Serra, in this regard you can t get way from this unit. According to Sillman, drawing relates to the scale of the hand while painting responds to any scale of production. Drawings aren t precious for Sillman. While making them, this artist remains open to all sorts of possibilities. She s discovered that you can do something, step back, and then, go, It s done. She also doesn t hesitate to rip up clunkers. To make a drawing, she said, you can immediately charge in with a pencil line. You can build up as you go along. Things are different with a painting. Working with acrylic colors and canvas is comparable, Sillman has suggested, to the way a beaver constructs a thatched roof. With a painting, you need to consider the whole picture. Unlike drawings, you make pictorial decisions with a goal in mind.

As she proceeds, Sillman can be very thorough. In her last solo show at Sikkema Jenkins & Co., she had, by the entrance to the gallery, dozens of black-and-white drawings installed in tiers five sheets high, stretching from wall-to-wall. Each measured 22 by 30 inches. All but one of the works at Gladstone measures 25 by 40 inches, the next size up in standard drawing paper. The artist likes the ease with which she can purchase reams of it. Using 40-by-60-inch sheets offers the same convenience. That s the size of an unframed work displayed over the fireplace on East 64th and others she next expects to make. It s always nice to have a beginning, Sillman said, as I questioned her about her latest show. Amy Sillman, SK39, 2017, acrylic, ink, and silkscreen on paper. Like a number of other artists who were featured in The Forever Now, Laura Hoptman s 2013 show of contemporary painting at the Museum of Modern Art in New York, Sillman makes work that is not quite entirely abstract. When referring to the recognizable elements in her work, she prefers the word figuration to representation. In the drawings at Gladstone, there are body fragments heads, hips, a belly here and there. A painting at MoMA had a large teapot-like shape. In Sillman s art, these objective elements provide internal scale.

The combination of unabashedly non-figurative elements with overtly recognizable components in Sillman s work is one of the many signs that she is at the forefront of a cohort of artists ushering in a new phase in the roughly 100-year history of abstraction. Pure abstraction has receded, replaced by something more diffuse and nuanced. It s more thoughtful, too. MoMA curator William S. Rubin could never suggest that the discourse of this new, well-educated generation of painters is on the level of night school metaphysics, as he used to say about the Abstract Expressionists. These days, what might be called Artisanal Abstraction is practiced by a generation who were told in art school that painting is dead. With drawing at the core of her practice, Sillman makes zines, iphone animations, cartoons, and amusing dinner party seating charts. And like many of her compatriots, she works in varying dimensions depending on the genre. Her art and those of her colleagues tends to be layered (literally and figuratively). You won t find colors sitting next to one another, à la Color Field stripes or Unfurleds. Then too, different techniques are used on the same surfaces. Moreover, variations no longer register as the same idea developed multiple times. Dissimilarities abound. Lately, it s become Amy Sillman, SK28, 2017, acrylic, ink, and silkscreen on paper harder to know when a work of art is finished. Sillman, for one, doesn t think

paintings have endings. For her, that s part of the freedom a painting expresses. Then, there s the nature of time. Ten years ago, Sillman provocatively wrote that time has replaced space as the primary consideration in the visual arts. Take her own multilayered paintings and drawings and how deceptive they can be. A lot of tinkering is involved in their creation. Sillman scrapes away colors and shapes that she s applied previously, and she ends up with images that could never have been preplanned. She once wrote, That s the new emotion: simultaneity of experience, contradiction we cannot see things one way any more. At a certain point, even she can t remember the order in which she laid down the marks on her sheets of paper. Eventually, she herself wonders what s in front, and what s in back. For the artist, That s my greatest joy with them: wondering how did that happen? In a recent talk on her brilliant Michelangelo exhibition, Metropolitan Museum of Art curator Carmen Bambach mentioned that the Italian word disegno expresses broader meanings than the English noun drawing. While referring to marks made on a surface, it also alludes to the inventiveness of the artist. Perhaps the current show at Gladstone should be called, Amy Sillman: Disegno.