Figure is to Background as Representation is to Model: Neil Gall s Cut-Outs, Offcuts and Holes. By Kate Thorpe. May 30, 2015

Similar documents
Janet Fish s Jarring Experiments in Still Life Painting by Peter Malone on January 28, 2016

Name: Period: THE ELEMENTS OF ART

elements of design worksheet

Line Line Characteristic of Line are: Width Length Direction Focus Feeling Types of Line: Outlines Contour Lines Gesture Lines Sketch Lines

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

Art-Drawing-Painting. 3-D or 3 dimensional when all 3 dimensions: length, height, and width can be touched and felt.

By: Zaiba Mustafa. Copyright

From Dot To Line, Shape, Form, Space & Media

A SPATIAL ILLUSION. Isometric Projection in the East

Meditation. FABRIC & CUTTING REQUIREMENTS Quilt size: 21" x 32" Print for sky yard. Print for mountain yard. Various prints scraps

The Elements and Principles of Art

The Elements and Principles of Design. The Building Blocks of Art

the side facing the world

The Heckscher Museum of Art

Art Radar: Beetween painting and sculpture: Zhu Jinshi at Inside-Out Art Museum, bytianmo Zhang, 15th January 2016

AVI20 ELEMENTS OF DESIGN COLLABORATIVE POSTER

These new works, on show at the Ravestijn Gallery in Amsterdam until October 22, extract components from within a photographic image and render them i

Daniel W. Coburn's photographs confront the tension between the artist's inner narrative what's projected to the outside world

Review Questions for Design Final Exam Correct answers are highlighted in RED

Standard 1(Making): The student will explore and refine the application of media, techniques, and artistic processes.

Perspective in Art. Yuchen Wu 07/20/17. Mathematics in the universe. Professor Hubert Bray. Duke University

Elements Of Art Study Guide

Project 1: Value & Vanitas

A Painter is an artist who creates a representational, imaginative or abstract design by using colored paints to a two dimensional, prepared, flat

Designed by Melissa DiRenzo thesweetescape.ca

Michelli, Thomas. Alien Skins: Experimental Italian Painting of the 1960 s. Hyperallergic.com (Hyperallergic), 13 April 2013.

ELEMENTS OF VISUAL ART

Module 8. Lecture-1. A good design is the best possible visual essence of the best possible something, whether this be a message or a product.

3.3 Creative imagery through Photomontage

Tam Van Tran at Susanne Vielmetter Projects

Table of Contents. Pom-Pom Bookmark Yarn covered Pencil Holder Yarn Hangers... Yarn Hair Bows

Installation view, West Gallery. Courtesy of Angell Gallery

Illustrated Art Lessons

Year 6 Visual Arts Unit 2017 Colour and Tone Term: Week:

Richard Learoyd IN THE STUDIO

GRADE 1, 2, 3 LESSON PLAN PLAYGROUND ARCHITECT WOODWORKING

Line: A few definitions

Norman Lundin: Inside/Outside

Art 2D Mid-Term Review 2018

Metaphysical Abstraction

Jeff Elrod, Echo Painting (b/w), UV ink on canvas

ILLUSION CONFUSION! - MEASURING LINES -

PARIS UGO RONDINONE: PURE MOONLIGHT AT ALMINE RECH THROUGH APRIL 12TH, 2013

Y10 Art at Ark Elvin Academy

The Second Generation Abstract Expressionist, Ed Clark

Sam Sanford, Untitled, 2013

Amazing but true, the very first pop-up books appeared more than 700 years ago. The

Complete Drawing and Painting Certificate Course

Class 1. Modern Art Curriculum Introduction. The Sleeping Gypsy (Rousseau) Les Demoiselles d Avignon (Picasso) Project Ideas

Composition in Photography

Jack Whitten: Erasures

Learning Adobe Photoshop CS6

STRUCTURE AND DISRUPTION: A DETAILED STUDY OF COMBINING THE MECHANICS OF WEAVING WITH THE FLUIDITY OF ORGANIC FORMS

Your Personal Artist Tree. Lesson prepared by Esther Saulnier

TWO DIMENSIONAL DESIGN CHAPTER 11: TEXTURE

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

MADE EASY a step-by-step guide

Poppies. Principles of design: repetition, variety, movement, contrast, unity, balance.

CUBISM, SURREALISM AND ABSTRACT ART

Joanne Greenbaum s Amazing Parties

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

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

MCA Kids Adventure Trail

First Semester Exam Review If packet is 100% complete and turned in the day of the exam, you can earn 10pts extra credit on your exam grade.

Educators Resource. Amy Sillman: Landline 28 September January 2019

Putting The Hole Thing Together

Elements of Product design

Unknown Voyage. Amir H. Fallah. Summer Exhibitions. June 14 through September 9, 2017

Vocabulary Glossary Visual Arts K-4

Education Resources for the Ovation Special René Magritte: The Man in the Hat

Katja Mater What We See And What We Know

Elements of Art. Line Shape Form Space Value Color Texture

An artist may use broken or jagged lines to show fear or irritability.

Abstract shape: a shape that is derived from a visual source, but is so transformed that it bears little visual resemblance to that source.

What is TEXTURE? State Learning Objective (S.L.O) Key Concepts 6 th Grade Art

Standard 1(Making): The student will explore and refine the application of media, techniques, and artistic processes.

Feminist Publication of Art and Politics.

Write It Do It #1: Stereotypical Build - Images. Front view:

A Colorful World Illustrated Art Lessons

Art Glossary Studio Art Course

IN PROFILE. Brenda Hoddinott. clumping them all into only three categories is very challenging.

ROYAL SCHOOL OF NEEDLEWORK DIPLOMA ADVANCED SILK SHADING

The Elements of Art: Photography Edition. Directions: Copy the notes in red. The notes in blue are art terms for the back of your handout.

Art Masterpiece: Chain of Spires Along the Gila River, (1855) by John Mix Stanley

Example Items. Studio Art I

Sketchbook Assignments Due Monday, November 15, 2010

Shape-making is an exciting and rewarding pursuit. WATERCOLOR ESSENTIALS. The Shape of Things to Come By Jean Pederson

Artistic Visual Terminology

DEPARTMENT B DIVISION 147 BOOTHS Division 147 All Classes Pay Category 1 C) H Booth

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

The Element of Art. 1.Line 2.Shape (2-D) 3.Form (3-D) 4.Space (3-D depth or distance) 5.Texture 6.Color

Bettie van Haaster. Blog: Valeria Ceregini January 12, 2018 Source: valeriaceregini.wordpress.com

1. Strengths (what did the solution do very well?)

DIVISION H ARTS & CRAFTS Jennifer Tackett, Extension Specialist for 4-H and Youth Development

Spears Art Studio High School and Adult Beginners Painting with Oil and/oracrylic. Can You Answer? Brushy Creek

Jackson Pollock

FRONTAL VIEW OF. Brenda Hoddinott

POP ART EXHIBITION 2018

Standards Content Skills Assessments

Victor Pasmore: Towards a New Reality

Transcription:

Figure is to Background as Representation is to Model: Neil Gall s Cut-Outs, Offcuts and Holes By Kate Thorpe May 30, 2015 Neil Gall, Yellow (Poussin) (2014), oil on linen, 29.13 x 24.41 inches (all images courtesy of the artist and David Nolan Gallery) In Neil Gall s newest paintings, which are currently being exhibited at David Nolan (April 30 June 13, 2015), there is a powerfully coercive interplay between figure and background that veers between the unstable and the terrifying. Uneven, jagged holes, cut out of tape-wrapped canvases, become resting places for large, perfectly white, almost moon-like spheres (as in the all-white Kitchen (Velasquez), 2015). Sometimes the orbs are not perfectly round but punched or crunched. It is only on second glance that these prove to be not sculptures but paintings, examples of dazzlingly skillful photorealism. Gall paints and draws from enlarged photographs of sculpture-like models, with such accuracy that it feels like an exercise of physical force to squeeze their robust threedimensionality onto a two-dimensional plane. His compelling, uncanny representations of

composed detritus materials mainly Ping-Pong balls and colored tape, but also string, tinfoil, and strands of hot glue seem to strain, push, or pop out from their surfaces. Installation view of Neil Gall: Cut-Outs, Offcuts and Holes (2015) at the David Nolan Gallery, New York Gall was born in 1967 in Scotland and now lives in London, and this marks his third show at David Nolan. Even as his work requires masterful techniques, he plays with a particularly dynamic form of bricolage, which lends his pieces the sense of discovery found in a child s arts-and-crafts project. He wraps and layers colored tape around Ping- Pong balls and other everyday materials from his studio to create his models. He then precisely lights these off-kilter, almost haphazard sculptures, full of bulges, jagged edges, and angular, misshapen circular cut-outs, and photographs them. His meticulous paintings and drawings of these objects use the photograph as a reference, rather than the original model. Neil Gall, Eye (2015), oil on linen, 36.22 x 29.33 inches

Gall uses materials of assembly and repair (tape, glue, plastic wrap, tinfoil), but also of play. They bear no particular cultural or allegorical meaning. All the more strange and even humorous, then, are the anthropomorphic associations of his work, as when a white, cycloptic sphere seems to stare out from a background of yellow tape in the painting Eye (2015). Yet the personification never fully is complete: the materials remain singular enough that one never forgets the reality of colored tape and white balls. Gall s previous work explored monstrous, creature-like models of taped-together Ping- Pong balls, often posed against plain backgrounds, which called to mind the work of 17 th -century painter Giuseppe Arcimboldo, as well as the mannequins in the Metaphysical paintings of Giorgio de Chirico, the Surrealist landscapes of Salvador Dalí and Yves Tanguy, and the biomorphic dolls of Hans Bellmer, and suggested various sexualized scenarios of bondage. The feeling of bondage in Gall s work continues in this show, but encompasses the background as well as the figure, and in fact confuses and entangles the two. The drawing Ghost (2015), its edges pulled and torqued, approximates a diamond. The tape performs two roles: as a background, it subsumes the figures within it (the white orbs); as part of a three-dimensional model, it also acts as the dominant figure in the composition. Neil Gall, Allegory (Bronzino) (2014), oil on linen, 29.92 x 24.41 inches Gall gestures toward a wide array of painters, from Bronzino to Nicolas Poussin to Barnett Newman, and his tape and ping-pong ball models lend a touch of silliness to a painterly tradition that used sculptural maquettes as preparatory tools. In Allegory (Bronzino) (2014), a solid plane of tape echoes the blue background of Bronzino s An Allegory with Venus and Cupid (ca.1545), and white balls, some barely visible within the blue tape, are analogous to Bronzino s composition, where submerged heads and hands eerily emerge from varying depths of the background, bodies twisting and arms

reaching, with no one place for the viewer s eye to rest. In Gall s composition, the blue material actively stretches, taking the place of the fingers and hands: the background reaches into the figure, and the figure is partially subsumed into background. That these depths and shadows emerge from feats of photorealism lends them a seriousness as well as a strange ambiguity. Neil Gall, Kitchen (Velázquez) (2015), oil on linen, 29.13 x 23.82 inches In a recent interview with Amy E. Brown in Curating the Contemporary (CtC), Gall describes his creation of models as playful and childish, while his painting and drawing feel more like the work of an adult. Indeed, the technique of framing these bound compositions into the secondary frame of the two-dimensional canvas or paper surface gives them a weight, a substantial quality (a word that Gall mulls over in his interview). The images appear to bulge and press outward, but not towards a separate allegorical meaning, as in some of the metaphorically-resonant images from Gall s earlier work Wildflower (2008) includes images of flowers, while Stitch in Time (2008) includes trees, and Consider Her Ways (2007) includes images of the facade of a house, clouds, and grass. Rather, they seem to seek escape from the forces of representation itself. Yet one also feels for the obsessive impulse evident in the tape-become-background: after all, isn t tape used to hold things together that threaten to fall apart? What structure threatens to collapse? These painted sculptures evoke messy, haphazard, hurried, desperate taping jobs on well-worn boxes. In Yellow (Poussin), trails from a glue gun hang. The horizontal yellow tape makes it all the way across, but vertical pieces (gesturing at a grid) stretch across the top half and end in the middle. In most of the gaps left by the yellow tape where Ping-Pong balls push outward, there is white tape, and beneath that, bits of pink and blue and a tiny hint of red, brown and, in the upper left

quadrant, a black gap. The textures and depths of these compositions defamiliarize the camera s perspective, exchanging the ordered, known, and mathematical for another kind of depth the lost or neglected, depthless space of a shadow that falls on an imaginary surface. Neil Gall, Ghost (2015), colored pencil on paper, 51.97 x 39.96 inches The soft, exposed pencil lines of Gall s drawings displayed at the back of the gallery and in a small adjoining room reveal immediately their two-dimensional status and offer greater nuance in terms of layers and colors than his paintings. Colored pencil lines overlap in crosshatched grids; light reflects from the translucent plastic wrapping; the edges gradually fade into a purple haze created by gridded red and blue pencil lines. Up close, these works seem perhaps more attuned to the details and intricacies of the materials dangling and overlapping in uneven borders. A few strands of string or yarn wind in curlicues. Whereas brushstrokes are not visible in Gall s paintings, here pencil lines are apparent, creating a feeling of intimacy with the work as a crafted thing. The figure blends into its background, and the composition merges into the white paper surface. The represented folds in the drawn object echo the actual folds of the material paper. What Gilles Deleuze calls an Exogamous force in his 1988 book, The Fold: Leibniz and the Baroque, is here in full display: we see an outward system (strips of tape) acting on another system (a rectangular frame, Ping-Pong balls) to form and shape it. Halfdeflated balls reveal the impact of this external force. Or is this an endogamous system of folds revealing other folds, existing coherently as a structure and form in itself? Is this background a living landscape, full of forces intrinsic to it?

Neil Gall, Sky Hole (2015), oil on linen, 18.5 x 14.76 inches Gall s work seems to model, even literalize, such ambiguities of figure and background. If one struggles to define and separate the two, then the white balls, as they seem to pull away from the taped bindings, physicalize this very struggle. Perhaps Gall s paintings and drawings do not allegorize contradictions of figuration so much as illustrate and physicalize them. Figure battles against background and background against figure in a finely and precisely-depicted morass of contradictions. Indeed, so skillfully does Gall paint and draw that the illusion of threedimensionality vies against the viewer s certainty of the painting s flat surface. Viewing these works incites an internal war between illusion and materiality where the two-dimensional illusion is the tactile reality and the three-dimensional material model is illusory. These pieces confront us with the tensions latent in mimetic representation and in the boundaries between painting, sculpture and photography, in that they put all three mediums fully into action. Gall s newest work also refuses to let the viewer rest as a mere spectator or voyeur: it extends beyond the imagery s borderline, subsuming and entwining the viewer in its strong, sticky embrace.