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Spanierman Modern is pleased
to announce the opening on September 7, 2006 of Long Island
Abstraction: 1950s to the Present. While the impulses
generating abstraction are usually thought to reside in the
forms and experiences of industry and the city, beginning
in the 1950s some of its most significant and revolutionary
developments have happened on Long Island. Many of the central
figures in the Abstract Expressionist movement established
homes at the east end of the island and their presence brought
other abstract artists in future years, all of whom found
fresh perspectives and new avenues of exploration at a distance
from, yet within range of, Manhattan. Starting with Abstract
Expressionist paintings and sculptures by Willem de Kooning,
Elaine de Kooning, Ibram Lassaw, James Brooks, Charlotte Park,
Lee Krasner, Jimmy Ernst, Neil Williams, and Theodore Stamos,
and collages by Esteban Vicente, the exhibition will represent
the diversity of responses to Long Island offered by successive
generations of postwar and contemporary abstract artists.
The public
interest in art on Long Island was sparked recently by the
movie, Pollock, the Hollywood depiction of the life
of Jackson Pollock released in 2000. The film introduced general
audiences to the pastoral stretch of eastern Long Island where
Pollock and Lee Krasner settled after marriage, leaving the
lofts and tenements of New York’s Greenwich Village
behind for a fresh start in the “country,” which
was how Krasner referred to The Springs, a section of East
Hampton. The presence of Pollock and Krasner drew other New
York artists to summer and even take up year round residence
in the area. In the 1950s and 1960s, while New York City established
itself as the world’s leading cultural capital, the
now glitzy “Hamptons” was being transformed into
a wonderfully inclusive bohemian gathering place.
The combination of
reasonable proximity to the city, yet sufficient distance
from the urban fast-pace, and the availability of inexpensive
housing and land, enticed artists, dealers, art critics, museum
curators, and collectors to Long Island. There they found
that people from all walks of life could interact and exchange
ideas, allowing artists the freedom to be as reclusive, private,
outgoing, or competitive as they wanted to be.
Elaine
De Kooning’s Cave #54, Sand Wall (1985) is
a monumental painting from a late major series inspired by
the artist’s visits to Lascaux and Altamira in Europe.
Created in East Hampton, the painting reflects critical elements
of Abstract Expressionist art, including sweeping gesture
and expansive color and scale. De Kooning masterfully applies
these modes to maximize the dreamlike impact of the emblematic
images of animals in this impressive composition, evoking
the exhilarating vitality and the brilliant atmosphere of
one of the bright sunny days particular to Long Island’s
East End.
While
many artists did indeed respond to the extraordinary environment
of the East End with nature-based abstractions, others continued
to explore other facets of expressionism, creating works informed
by powerful emotive and psychological undercurrents. Ibram
Lassaw, best known for his open space welded sculptures in
bronze, steel and other alloys, created poetic, ordered statements
inspired by Taoist and Zen teachings, the psychological teachings
of Jung, and other sources. His lyrical sculpture Sidereality
from 1961, along with his paintings 85/04 and 85/13
Black Cohites, displays a characteristically elegant
sense of order and calm. Lassaw, who worked abstractly throughout
his career, continued to produce work in his Long Island studio
until his death in 2003.
Different ways of working reductively from nature are approached
in the work of Betty Parsons, the prominent dealer whose prescience
in promoting Pollock and Abstract Expressionism was due at
least in part to her talent as a painter, and in that of Robert
Harms, in his rich impastos. The ways in which the power and
intensity of nature on Long Island can inform shape, line,
and color can be seen in the geometric canvases of Della Weinberger
as well as in a variety of other recent examples by Dan Christensen,
Mike Solomon, and Frank Wimberley, among the artists associated
with Minimalist, Color Field and Post-Minimalist tendencies.
Inspired by the crystalline waterways, sandy beaches, and
hamlets of the South Fork, Wimberley’s forceful, richly
textured abstractions draw from the improvisational quality
of jazz music.
The strong
individualistic visions of John Alexander, Richmond Burton,
Perry Burns, Dan Rizzie, and Gary Komarin demonstrate how
the distance from urban distractions afforded artists possibilities
of reinventing their work and expanding the language and history
of abstraction. Trained in architecture, Richmond Burton stressed
visual order in his early paintings, characterized by hard-edged
geometric forms; in more recent work such as Solex,
a more fluid and organic patterning has come to the fore.
Living and working in the former home of Elaine de Kooning,
and sustained by the unspoiled surroundings of East Hampton,
he has turned to a more biomorphic abstraction. Dan Rizzie’s
exquisitely crafted abstractions appear disarmingly simple
and minimal; it is only on close examination that his meticulous
concern for detail becomes apparent. He works in a variety
of media, incorporating elements such as newspaper and wax,
as well as coffee grounds and dirt, into his compositions
to create an aged, layered effect. His vocabulary of forms
includes lettering, vines, tree branches, and ancient vessels.
While the title of Gary Komarin’s Further Lane
alludes to place – one of several scenic roads that
lead to the sea in and around the village of East Hampton
– the painting also speaks poignantly of personal experience
and loss; Komarin recalls having biked along these country
lanes with his late wife, adding that “quite a few have
poetic sounding names or names that open doors to further
thoughts, including of course Further Lane.”
Bringing
a fresh perspective to Pollock’s statement, “I
am Nature,” Long Island Abstraction: 1950 to Present
celebrates the unique history and continuing rich contribution
of Long Island to American art. The exhibition, which remains
on view at Spanierman Modern until October 28, will subsequently
return to Spanierman Gallery at East Hampton, where it is
scheduled to open on November 4.
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