Skip to content

Louise P. Sloane, Geometric Memoirs

3/03/2018

BURTRYB, 2014, Acrylic paint and pastes on aluminum panel

BURTRYB, 2014

Acrylic paint and pastes on aluminum panel

Signed, titled, and dated on verso

50 x 46 inches

Photo credit: Etienne Frossard

Fated 5, 2016, Acrylic paint and pastes on aluminum panel

Fated 5, 2016

Acrylic paint and pastes on aluminum panel

Signed, titled, and dated on verso

40 x 34 inches

 

Blues, 2015

Acrylic paint and pastes on aluminum panel

Signed, titled, and dated on verso

40 x 34 inches

 

Photo credit: Etienne Frossard

Sizzler, 2017, Acrylic paint and pastes on aluminum panel

Sizzler, 2017

Acrylic paint and pastes on aluminum panel

Signed, titled, and dated on verso

46 x 44 inches

 

CCBAS, 2013

Acrylic paint and pastes on aluminum panel

Signed, titled, and dated on verso

50 x 46 inches

 

Photo credit: Etienne Frossard

VVPPO, Acrylic paint and pastes on aluminum panel

VVPPO

Acrylic paint and pastes on aluminum panel

Signed, titled, and dated on verso

34 x 30 inches

Photo credit: Etienne Frossard

Fated 7, 2016, Acrylic paint and pastes on aluminum panel

Fated 7, 2016

Acrylic paint and pastes on aluminum panel

Signed, titled, and dated on verso

40 x 34 inches

Photo credit: Etienne Frossard

Press Release

Louise P. Sloane: Geometric Memoirs at the Pierre Hotel, March 6-May 31, 2018

Spanierman Modern is very pleased to announce its first solo show of Louise P. Sloane.  The show consists of a selection of Louise’s brightly colored paintings.  Each work is infused with highly personal text that inspires and motivates her to keep growing and experimenting.

Louise P. Sloane’s paintings emanate from a long and rich tradition in art history. The visual language of her paintings embrace the legacy of reductive and minimalist ideologies while celebrating the beauty of color, and a human affinity for mark making.  In the second quarter of the nineteenth century, J.M.W. Turner pushed the limits of using dramatic color. In 1839, a French chemist named Michel Eugene Chevreul published his treatise on the vibrant interaction of the complementary pairings of color, which include, red-green, orange-blue and yellow-violet. Monet rejoiced in the complementary colors’  tendency to reinforce one another, painting red poppies in green fields. It was in this vein that van Gogh, after painting The Night Cafe in Arles, explained to his brother Theo, "I tried to express the terrible passions of humanity by contrasts of red and green."

Georges Seurat evolved a system. An honorary founding father of Op Art, Seurat painted dots in colors he knew would dissolve, or 'optically mix' in the eyes of the beholder. The Fauves, and especially Matisse, took the next step, severing color's dependence upon nature. After World War II, the Abstract Expressionists liberated color once and for all from representation. Mark Rothko aspired to paint tragedy in brooding tones of purple.  After ten intensive years of achievement, the works of Pollock, Rothko and de Kooning spoke for themselves.

Painters that came of age around 1960 were determined to go in an opposite direction. Some of these artists spoofed the new consumer culture, others ignored it. All of them responded to the arresting colors and hard edges of its graphic design.   They accomplished this by employing all kinds of abstract forms and color contrasts that stimulated the partnership of eye and mind. Many artists experimented with one or more 'Op' techniques, as they came to be called, in exactly the same creative spirit that many twentieth-century painters and sculptors studied Cubism without a thought of becoming 'cubists'.

Louise P. Sloane joins the ranks of a small but mighty group of great artists including Ellsworth Kelly, Piet Mondrian, Mark Rothko, Richard Anuszkiewicz, Anton Albers and Barnett Newman. Like these monumental artists before her, she has dedicated her life's work to exploring the limitless possibilities of a single theme; an insistence on color