| Some Late 20th Century
Abstraction |
| Works by Serge Armando, Arturo Herrera, and Marko
Milovanovic |
| March 30 - May 28, 1995 |
| Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions |
What if a friend told you that you couldnt see? Naturally
youd want to set that person straight. The easiest way to
do that would be to simply describe something in the immediate vicinity
and then verify with your friend that its the same thing he
or she sees -all of which would neatly prove your clever inquisitors
point. Rarely do we perceive anything with our own eyes that does
not implicate, involve, or call upon the vision of others. In fact,
most of the time we dont see , but we re-see
what has already been communally identified and named. A large part
of vision isnt so much about what our eyes perceive as it
is about verifying those perceptions against what is already known.
We dont define the world as private individuals. We collaborate
in a collective definition of what things are and what they look
like, or should look like. The most simple proof of this
is the way we cry "What is that?" when confronted
by something weve never seen before. Part of what causes our
befuddlement is that the new object (or phenomenon or behavior)
fulfills no expectations. It calls up no pre-existing files, fits
no profile of what we know. Seeing is meaningless (in the most literal
sense of the word) if we do not recognize what is being seen. That
quirky space between cognition and re-cognition is precisely
the playground where the works in this show cavort.
The enigmatic abstraction of these three artists creates a basic
indeterminacy for its audience not because the object are hard to
perceive, but because the subject are hard to identify. Many of
the shapes and formal arrangements being presented may look entirely
familiar, and yet impossible to locate or pin down. In the work
of Arturo Herrera, this visual recall is measured against the styles
and signatures of popular imagery. Serge Armando gives the same
activity an unexpectedly parodic twist with hard-edge abstractions
that mimic military ribbons mimicking hard-edge abstractions. The
sense of evasive and mutable identities that results lays the groundwork
for Marko Milovanovics experiments with fragmentation,
combination, order and coherence.
Insofar as it withholds as much as it reveals, this work willfully
precipitates a mild and not unpleasant crisis of recognition. Actually,
it is a kind of blindness that is being toyed with. The lapses and
overlaps in cultural consciousness that these artists pry open point
out the ultimate vulnerability of anything we may think we "know"
with our eyes.
Carmine Iannaccone, April 1995.
Some Late 20th Century Abstraction is one of the first exhibitions
since LACE moved to it's new building to fully make use of the space.
The front gallery houses the hilarious work of Sean Duffy, who makes
teddy bears out of beer cans and yarn. His objects are both endearing
and pointed commentaries about consumer culture. In the front window
is an installation by Barry Morse and Sue Kornfeld about the actress
Gloria Graham, whose star is outside of LACE's window. Serge Armando,
Arturo Herrera and Marko Milovanovic each explore the notion of
minimal abstraction making compelling works that not only function
well on their own, but also draw strength from the juxtaposition.
In the back gallery are beautiful black and white photographs by
Wendy Moore (LACE,
Hollywood).
Artscenecal
May 1995
...the space notcher series is so like
the shape of the star-producing nebula photographed last month by
Hubble telescope--fractal across a trillion light-years and from
the beginning of time! ( of course, the face of Christ already has
been sited in the nebula.)
Libby Lumpkin. November 18, 1995.
Les " Groupes aléatoires " procèdent
dune conception qui remet totalement en question la forme
tableau. Celle-ci est éclatée et si lon peut encore recomposer
son support dans sa forme initiale, la peinture qui apparait est,
elle, strict produit de laléatoire, révélant son sens, pur
non-sens, et peut-être la dernière expression de lhorreur,
en cette fin de siècle, après tant de barbaries.
Cela dit, lartiste nabandonne pas son sourire, et maintient
loeuvre ouverte, laissant à chacun la possibilité de recomposer
ses tableaux, de leur donner voix multiples, vies nouvelles, en
superposant ou dissociant les éléments les constituant.
Pierre Le Calvez, avril 1994.
Cest en 1991 que le peintre Marko Milovanovic a commencé
ce cycle de peintures aux pourtours inhabituels. Celles-ci layant
déjà mené fort loin, lui ouvrent désormais de vastes champs dexploration;
sur la forme du tableau, la relation entre support et peinture,
mais aussi la confrontation au sein de loeuvre de différents
espaces et temps. Il y bouleverse nos critères habituels de jugement
quant à lunité, la linéarité, ou la composition, cette dernière
nétant plus issue de la forme du tableau, mais au contraire,
la générant. Les repères usuels sont bousculés et cest par
lémotion quil nous pousse à pénétrer ce monde, nous
proposant de redécouvrir le nôtre.
Comme il aime à le dire, il dévoile le visible, résolvant le dilemme
abstraction-figuration en procédant à des représentations du monde,
issues de la pensée. Ainsi séloigne-t-on définitivement de
tout principe dimitation. Na-t-il pas, au reste, intitulé
ses derniers grands tableaux: " Regards sur le monde, yeux
clos", réaffirmant que tout est pensée, que cest elle
qui voit, bien avant que cela ne soit traduit en images ou en langage.
Il sagit pour le peintre de transcrire ses états desprit.
Ces peintures nous poussent à la contemplation, à la méditation,
plus encore à la reflexion. Elles ne sont pas de celles qui laissent
indifférent. Elles appellent dauthentiques amateurs, de ceux
qui sont en appétit de nouveauté.
Pierre Le Calvez, décembre 1993.
|