M The New York Art World ®"All You Need To Know."
M The New York Art World ®"All You Need To Know."
 

art reviews

 

 

Auction Report
The Impressionist and Modern Sales >>
By Nicollette Ramirez

Margaret Gonzalez
Leonard Tachmes Gallery >>

By Aimee Sinclair

Unlikely Materials
Alpan Gallery >>

By Elle Can

Richard Butler
Kevin Bruk Gallery >>

By Rachel Hoffman

 

              


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Auction Report
The Impressionist and Modern Sales

By Nicollette Ramirez

 

The sales at New York City’s major auction houses for Impressionist and Modern Art, Sotheby’s and Christie’s, were characterized by a few common factors; a range of quality, collectible work, without having any particularly stellar pieces; vigorous bidding with prices almost double that of six months to a year ago (except for a few surprise slumps); and major telephone bidding from international collectors that outpaced local bids..

With the euro and the pound far outpacing the American dollar it was no surprise that some of the most expensive works at auction went to telephone bidders in London. Asians, Russians and other Europeans all seemed to be shopping with gusto, while the Americans in the room let things pass. Take for example Sotheby’s Lyonel Feininger’s Jesuiten III, an oil painting with cubist influences, which showed three heavily robed priests and one woman of uncertain identity. Relatively under-represented in the auction world, the Feininger sold for $23, 280, 000 to a London buyer with paddle number L0058, which suggested he or she was paying almost half the price in pounds!

Overall, Christie’s sale totaled less than Sotheby’s, $236.4 million to $278.5 million, but there were some similarities in the work being offered and the prices for which they sold, or didn’t sell. One surprise for both houses was the failure of Amedeo Modigliani. Recently this artist has been selling well, and both houses estimated his works far above what they sold for; for example, Christie’s estimated La femme au collier vert (Madame Menier) between $12 million and $16 million and it slipped well under this, as did Sotheby’s Portrait de Jeanne Hébuterne, estimated between $8 million and $10 million. Granted, these were not the most attractive representations of women that has Modigliani painted, but they were nevertheless great representations of the work of a great artist.

As always, there were a lot of Picassos for sale and, for the newly minted Russian collectors, Chagalls. Works of lesser importance in Picasso’s oeuvre sold for reasonable prices. Tête de Femme, a bronze sculpture that was modeled on Françoise Gilot, sold for $420, 000 at Sothebys. In contrast, Paul Gauguin’s Tête de femme tahitienne, carved out of wood, sold for $1, 384, 000 at Christie’s. Some rare Egon Schiele’s sold well for Christie’s (Rufer at $3, 064, 000 and Sitzender weiblicher Halbakt in grüner Bluse at $5, 080, 000) though some that seemed particularly desirable, such as Schiele’s self portrait, Selbstbidnis, didn’t sell. A dealer in impressionist and modern art said one had to be careful as sometimes Schiele’s work was colored in by others after his death.

Both houses had Giacommettis that sold well; Sotheby’s Homme travesant une place par un matin du soleil sold for $7, 432, 000 and Christie’s L’homme qui chavire sold for $18, 520, 000. Kees Van Dongen, a perennial favorite, was featured at both auction houses too. One of the most beautiful works, La Cavalière, showing a woman in equestrian garb standing with a whip in her hands against a stand of trees with horses in the background, sold at Sotheby’s day sale for $768, 000.

Two outstanding works that made records were Paul Cézanne’s Nature morte au melon vert, a watercolor and pencil on paper that sold at Sotheby’s for $25, 520, 000, and Juan Gris’s oil on canvas Le pot de geranium at Christie’s, which sold for $18, 520, 000. (All final prices include the auction houses’ commission; 20% of the first $500, 000 and 12% of the rest.) The Neumann Family Collection offered up some treats at Sotheby’s like Giacomo Balla’s Velocità d’automobile + luci (sold for $3, 960, 000) and Theo Van Doesburg’s Contra-Composition VII (which sold for $4, 184, 000). The family’s commitment to collecting spans more than half a century and continues toda, with their support of young and emerging artists. A show entitled Incomplete, co-curated by Herbert Neumann and Manon Slome, is scheduled to open in September at the Chelsea Art Museum. Undoubtedly the upcoming contemporary sales will feature the work of some of the hot artists in the show, like Jeff Koons and Karen Kilimnik.


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Margaret Gonzalez
Leonard Tachmes Gallery

By Aimee Sinclair

 

In The Goncourt Journal, 1867, Edmond and Jules de Goncourt proclaim that “The painter who does not paint the woman of his time will not endure.” Margarate Gonzalez’ portraits of contemporary women share traits that are prevalent in odalisques painted by male painters of the 17th century. Her work does not stray too far from those produced by and for a male gaze. Consistent with odalisque tradition, she utilizes models of Turkish and European heritage. The women in Odalisque Number One and Six-Fours les Plages are not gazing at the viewer but instead look off to the side, disengaging from the viewer. Like the women in the earlier odalisques, these women are eluding control of the viewer, electing a passive stance.

Although there are no harems or veils present, Gonzalez’ images are embedded in traditional notions of feminine fantasy. Odalisques were generally characterized by women who don’t look directly at the viewer. In the painting, A Beautifully Arranged Basket- Odalisque, the subject is a woman with a long presumably blonde mane that is transformed into a bouquet of flowers. Her make-up and features are vaguely reminiscent of Patrick Nagel’s women; she gazes out vacuously, lips slightly parted not unlike a fashion model. Gonzalez paints in a flowery and illustrative style. At times, the paint appears as if poured onto the surface in lace like patterns. Although she references Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres, whose subjects are often semi-nude women stretched on pillows or huddled together in a harem to titillate a mostly male viewer, Gonzalez’ female subjects are portrayed as independent women who are not only beautiful but intelligent.In response to the observation made by the brothers de Goncourt, in their famous 19th century arts journal, one may indeed find that Gonzalez challenges the notion in which artistic validation is acquired by painting a nude portrait. She has, after all, clothed or covered her subjects’ bodies; but does really she succeed in freeing the work of sexual representation? The question remains as to whether a female painter who paints women can disencumber herself of the patriarchal nineteenth-century belief systems that are a mainstay of our visual diet. On the other hand, is mere appropriation enough today, where image is simultaneously everything and nothing?

 


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Unlikely Materials
Alpan Gallery

By Elle Can

 

With “unlikely materials” as their point of departure, the nine artists in this exhibition experiment with mundane objects, such as plastic tubes and bottles, plumbing supplies, fragmented tools, office miscellany and used tea bags, to rewarding visual ends. Beyond their common interest in unconventional materials as an art medium, these artists share a poetic sensibility that evokes unexpected associations with their base materials. Curated by Nese Karakaplan, the show concentrates on meticulously executed work that fuses art and the everyday in mocking traditional distinctions between high and low art.

Karyn Cernera's installation, Homecoming II, enlists an unwitting “doormat” in dark associations. With a locked door mounted to the gallery wall, and an intimidating doormat that spells “welcome” (modified with up-ended pushpins, points ready to prick), her work is a witty juxtaposition of materials and meaning. The welcome mat, like a yogi's bed of nails, offers a needle-like platform that is impossible to step on. A playful irony underlines the work, leaving one to wonder about the sincerity of ever-present welcome signs. In similar fashion, Katie Seiden fuses disparate components from various industrial sources, creating one-of-a-kind items of manufactured whimsy.

Pliers, metal files and drills are embellished with lengths of colorful wire, nails or fragments of tools. Altered into fictitious use, each hand-sized piece becomes an abstraction, lined up on the gallery wall item-by-item, paralleling a hardware store's display. Titled The Fou Collection, this compilation of hybrid items embodies an illogical utility. Their initial industrial use muted by the transformation, the pieces work on their own terms as objects of art. Form replaces function, literally, in Seiden's quirky manipulation.

Hyungsub Shin’s two wall sculptures, both titled Uprooted, consist of clusters of electrical wire knotted into shapes that suggest organic growth. Utilizing brightly colored wires in one, and monochromatic grays, whites and blacks in the other, the nodules of wire attach to the wall like tendrils, wrapping around corners and reaching out. While the title “Uprooted” directly evokes the unearthed and uncovered; it also resonates with displacement; possibly hinting at an autobiographical reference in that the artist comes from Korean. Elizabeth Knowles’ Night Vision also borrows from nature. In an eye-catching installation of botanical shapes cut out of X-ray film, Knowles’ “flowers” cling to the wall like ivy. Acquiring instant drama through the use of diagnostic prints, the work is underpinned by suggestions of physical ailment.

Tensile, an airy sculpture, by T. M. Roche Kelly uses rows of paper clips crocheted together with silver wire to create a biomorphic form that hangs from the ceiling. Her other work in the show, Quilt, is a tapestry of interwoven paper lunch bags, with overlapping triangular and rectangular patterns outlined by machine-sewn lines of white thread. Repetitions of red, blue and green industrial markings printed on the bags are employed as compositional phrasing, and interact with the geometry inherent to the work. That the bags are remnants of lunches consumed by the artist over a six-month period adds a humorous footnote to the work.

Gulsen Calik also uses recycled materials; specifically, one hundred tea bags in her installation, Voyage to Chai. Utilizing watercolors, tea and ink, Calik depicts a cryptic narrative of phantasmagorical landscapes that she discovers in the Rorschach-like stains left on the bags by the dried tea leaves inside. Her installation vacillates between abstraction and representation; the images are whimsical and intimate, akin to a visual diary that records glimpses into an alternate world. Miwa Koizumi, an artist from Japan, recycles plastic soda bottles in a delightful manner, heating and melting transparent and green bottles into imaginative objects that look like underwater creatures. Fun to behold, Koizumi’s objects are de-constructions of consumer products, displayed under a bell jar to heighten and preserve their specimen-like quality.

Hyo-Jeong Nam and Jae Hi Ahn both concentrate purely on abstract forms. Hyo-Jeong Nam explores undefined terrain between linear and fragmented abstraction, staying always in alignment with the color harmonies found in nature. Her earlier, loosely geometric canvases, held in place by thread and collaged in swaths of muted colored burlap, contrast with two recent canvases, also in the show. In her new work, she concentrates on minutely stitched, meandering lines, hand-sewn across the canvas in swirling patterns. Jae Hi Ahn’s hanging sculpture is sumptuous and airy. Using lengths of clear plumbing tubes and green, circular acetate joints, she creates a pendulous tangle of shimmering loops. The form, like a mysterious and enchanting cloud, hovers only a foot above the floor, gently reflecting light and subtly twirling.

In the first decades of the twentieth century, art criticism began to embrace the idea that anything could be considered art if it were contextualized as such. The artists in this show extend their gaze beyond that caveat, bridging the distance between art and daily experience while uncovering hidden uses for the most mundane of materials. Setting aside paint and brush, these nine artists uncover formal qualities in the most ordinary of things, transforming the prosaic into art.

 


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Richard Butler
Kevin Bruk Gallery

By Rachel Hoffman

 

In these portraits, adorned with mystical flesh and fur, Butler employs many of the same symbols and narrative devices that Leopold von Sacher-Masoch (the nineteenth century author from whose name the word masochism is derived) used in his writings, particularly Venus in Furs.

The androgynous subject of a portrait titled Mer Noir peers shyly towards the bottom of the canvas, as if aware of the spectator's glances. There is the aura of something unattainable. The face and head are covered with a shiny black mask; the top of which has absurd mouse ears, like a plastic toy or a fetish object. Much like Leopold von Sacher-Masoch veiled his Venus in ermine furs, Butler allows sensuality to radiate from under Mer Noir’s dark, dense cocoon-armor.

As with Masoch, Butler’s scenes are frozen. The characters look cold, like statues, with pale ivory skin. In Venus in Furs, the hero falls in love with a cold marble statue of Venus and later becomes excited by a woman who is indistinguishable from a statue, when seen under the moonlight. Butler manipulates his characters into a plastic state for the performance of a role he has assigned, and although these portraits capture qualities of his subjects, there is a sense that he is externalizing and projecting mostly aspects of himself into the figures.

In a nod to the Italian Mannerists of the Sixteenth Century, Butler distorts and lengthens bodies in formulaic abstraction. There is an air of decadence and sophistication.The painting Geisha I possesses qualities similar to Madonna with the Long Neck by the Italian Mannerist, Parmigianino; the most obvious of these qualities is the Geisha’s elongated and languorous neck. Yet unlike Parmigianino’s Madonna, Butler’s subject seems to travel through space and time, elastically broadening into the clouds in a gesture of anticipation. The body appears monumental and pod-like. Once again he neatly drapes his muse in thick black fur. The head and neck sweep forward longingly towards the clouds in a painfully erect, phallic shape, seeming to hatch from its hairy womb-like clothing. The Geisha is not masked, but is nonetheless mysterious and object-like with her back turned from her audience. The viewer looks in the same direction as the subject, into a vast open sky. In this gesture, the Geisha seems to disclaim knowledge of or association with the gaze of the viewer.

The foundation of imagination builds in suspense and disavowal. Similarly, these devices are used in the writings of Masoch, but it is not clear if the element of mystery is used for the exact same idealistic purposes. Masoch was so idealistic, he almost never unwrapped his muses from their fur because he needed the covering in order to imagine perfection. The fur was not merely a luxurious and aristocratic source of warmth, sexual electricity or symbol of cruelty. Animal furs served as cover for possible flaws, however minute they may have been. Masoch wanted to imagine perfection. In contrast, Butler’s Geisha is distorted and malformed. She could be viewed as a reaction against the ideal. Yet, in keeping with the comparison to the Mannerists, Butler’s Geisha could be thought to embody ideal beauty, as something remote from nature.

He expands on his vision in Geisha II. The figure’s neck becomes more elastic, the head becomes smaller and more distant. Two thin trails of opaque black smoke seep from the place where the Geisha’s lips would be, and then blossom into thick and sinister tornados that rise towards the upper corners of the canvas. There is a sense of release, both in the idea that this could be the smoke of a sweet and powerfully toxic opiate, delicately released from the lungs against buttery clouds. The dark gaseous explosion suspended in a frozen ejaculation adds to the phallic quality of the Geisha’s neck and head.

 

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