Sunday, January 31, 2010

Steven Baris

Steven Baris is an artist working in Philadelphia.The paintings are oil and acrylic. I suggest going to his website and looking at each series. Each one shows an intense and focused exploration of ideas and attributes. I am attracted to the wonderful use of color, space and use of transparency and opaqueness.




Statement:

I characterize my paintings as spatial images. Space is the lens through which I best visualize the contemporary moment. Even more, it is how I make sense of my own biography, having grown up in decidedly non-urban spaces of Indian reservations throughout the West. Having since migrated to the most extensively built-up region of the continent, I have become interested in the derivative spaces of thoroughly constructed environments. My paintings attend to the spatial consequences of the countless structures that we routinely pass by and occasionally enter.


My influences are many and extend into the early 20th century, including works by El Lissitzky, Moholy Nagy, and Stuart Davis. I am interested in how these and other more recent artists have registered their own contemporary moment and the unprecedented transformations of interior and exterior space.


Wednesday, January 27, 2010

New Work


Whisper 2 10 x10 encaustic


Archway 12 x 12 encaustic



The Element of Air 24 x 24 encaustic and oil




Transparent Thinking 24 x 24 encaustic and oil



The Other Side 24 x 24 encaustic and oil




Whirlwind 24 x 24 encaustic and oil


Below the Surface 24 x 24 encaustic and oil



Whirlwind 2 24 x 24 encaustic and oil

Sunday, January 10, 2010

Point of Departure


Point of Departure 48 x 48 oil and wax LPressman


My favorite time of the exhibition process is after the show is hung and before the official opening. The stress, worry, and obsessive nit picking is (mostly) over. I can spend some time with the work as it lives outside of the studio.

And, the studio is almost empty!!




Point of Departure
Visual Arts Center of New Jersey
January 15 – March 19, 2010
Opening Reception: Friday January 15th, 2010


Installation photos:










Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Matthew Langley's art influences


Fields of Mars
,
2009
Acrylic and paper on panel, 9" x 12"

Courtesy of Blank Space Gallery, New York

I've come across Matthew Langley's work on several blogs and enjoy looking at it on his website. One needs to spend some time with each piece as they reveal themselves over time-a mark here, a change in color and texture there. He incorporates a wonderful use of line -the grid, of course- with drawn lines of color and surface, along with a mindful use of the edge. I find the work playful with a rich painter's vocabulary. I am looking forward to seeing his work in January.
Matthew Langley / Heejo Kim, Blank Space, Chelsea, NY
January 14 - February 2nd



Supercrush 9 x12 acrylic and paper on panel 2009

Sunshine Playroom, 2009 Acrylic and paper on panel, 9" x 12"


For Blinky, 2009 Acrylic and paper on panel, 9" x 12"

Here are Matthew's picks:
Jasper Johns
Robert Ryman
Mark Rothko
Robert Rauschenberg
Anselm Keifer
Egon Schiele
Ellsworth Kelly
Barnett Newman
A R Penck
Phillip Guston
Matisse
Neil Jenney (the "bad paintings" in particular)
Frank Stella (the early black paintings)


Sunflower oil on canvas, 60" x 50"Collection; Ernst and Young
On Developing New Images.
The artworks come from a series of divergent strategies. One of building and extending - the other of reducing and minimizing. These disparate approaches are not a way to impose meanings on the work, but can be viewed as a metaphoric crossroads. This crossroads is about extending the relationship of these different approaches, while at the same time allowing the viewer the liberty of time for further reading of the work. The image making that comes from this strategic foundation will be clear, concise and rational, while at the same time allowing for a sense of community and/or contemplation to develop in and around the artworks. The artworks are not linear narratives, this allows the element of time to be stretched or compressed to accommodate the viewer. This flexibility to time as well as environment allows the artwork to reveal itself in slower and calmer ways than an artwork that is based only on the relationship of drama and detail of the forms presented inside of it, while allowing those with a more compressed time line to react to the base elements of the composition and painterliness of the overall approach. This open ended approach is central to the artworks I create and allows them to be developed with a non-specific exactness.February 2009



Super Nature, 2008 Acrylic on paper, 18" x 15"


On Names.
Titles have become critical to my work. Primarily they re-establish a connection to the visible world and hopefully trigger a series of associations and ideas that are related between the artwork and the connotation in the viewers awareness. I avoid the descriptive and ordered approach (blue, or number 12, etc.) as well as using “untitled”. I view titles as an approach to open the viewer to a thought process that may influence the subject at hand. This could be viewed as a shorthanded poetry or similar device that allows further thought about or in connection to the artworks. January 2009

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Clues

As I struggle to clarify, simplify and rewrite my artist's statement I am struck by the clues I find in my photos:





Looking from the inside out of Cora Jane Glasser's studio


Looking from the inside out of Cora Jane Glasser's studio











Saturday, November 14, 2009

Debra Ramsay's art influences


Measuring Parallels 38
wax and eggshell on aluminum panel
24 inches square
2009


I first saw Debra Ramsay 's work at one of the art fairs in NYC, in 2008. I met her this June at her and Cora Jane Glasser's show during the Third Annual Encaustic Conference in MA.That was where the conversation about titling paintings took place. Along with her paintings she also was showing small wonderful graphite works on paper-gems.

I find her work thoughtful, soulful, and meditative. It is also based on mathematics which is so far from my place of artmaking that I find it intriguing.

Deb recently had a solo show called "Balancing Act "at
Blank Space in Chelsea in October. She and I also are two of the four artists chosen for the Dana Women's Artists Series
:Illusive Balance: Transcendental Pattern and Layered Surface in March of 2010. Her most recent project is the Postcard Race featured below.


The Postcard Race has begun! On Nov 4, at 4:40 pm I mailed 100 postcards, asking the recipients to mail them back to me. As they return I calculate the mph that the card traveled from Nov 4 at 4:40 until the moment I receive it. I will create an installation of the cards using their speed as a distinguishing factor within the installation. So far speeds as great as .168 mph have been achieved!!



Calculated Perception, 8 forms
wax on paper
eight pieces 8 x 5.5 inches each
2009

-->

Statement

The concept of balance interests me. Metaphorically, we search for balance in our lives. In the series “Measuring Parallels” I divide the surface area of each painting into two equal parts by measurement. Using wax or eggshell to distinguish each half, I find different ways to formulate this division. “Calculated Perceptions” is a continuation of the idea, looking at the differences of perceived and calculated (measured) balance. “Equal Weights” is a series involving balance where the different materials used are of the same weight. I reduce my visual language to horizontal and vertical line.
I build abstract paintings by combining two different materials; usually pigmented wax and eggshells. Using mathematics as a tool in this binary approach, I create serially related works. In kinship with artists as diverse as Mel Bochner and Tara Donovan, I make incremental changes within the concept of a series, each painting being part of a visual progression.
My materials include eggshells. The process is based on a centuries old technique. In choosing the shapes and sizes of the fragments of shell and ascribing the areas between them, I engage in deliberate mark making. I also apply pigmented wax in multiple layers, using a variety of tools, creating subtleties of color and texture.
The materials I use leave subtle evidence of a surface worked by hand.
Debra Ramsay
2009



The shelf-life of this list will be pretty short, only because I'll want to add other names. The names I'm listing below are of people who have created work that continues to fulfill my needs for beauty, intelligence, humor, and surprise. I feel fortunate to live in such a rich visual culture with all the forms of image communication we have. It allows me to "know" the work, although never having seen the actual pieces. I recently attended, for the first time, the Biennial in Venice. That brought a slew of additional artists into my awareness. I'm still recovering from the intensity of that trip. Artists work that I'm happy that I know about:
Walter DeMaria

Alfonso Bianchi
Pak Sheung Chuen
Tara Donovan
Byron Kim
Sol LeWitt
Georgio Morandi
Lygia Pape
Robert Ryman
Anne Truitt

This was a great opportunity to think of them yet again!

Measuring Parallels #33 encaustic, eggshell on birch panel, 2008 12 in x 24 in


Yellow and Black Balance
encaustic eggshell inlay on MDF board
four 6 x 6 inch squares
2008


About Eggshell Inlay :
This technique is believed to have originated in China, and was later transferred to Japan via Korea. Many examples from the Meiji era (late 19th century) exist today as small decorative boxes or bowls.
Actual eggshells are used, in their natural colors of white, brown and blue/green.
D Ramsay

Saturday, October 31, 2009

Studio News and Works in the Studio


24 x 24 oil and wax on board LPressman@2009


Now Represented by:
Chace Randall Gallery, Andes, NY
Anelle Gandelman Fine Art, Larchmont, NY
The Allyn Gallup Gallery
, Sarasota, FL
Jack Meier Gallery, Houston,TX
The Rosenfeld Gallery, Philadelphia, PA



48 x48 oil and wax LPressman@2009


6 24 x24 oil and wax on board in progress


Upcoming Exhibitions/2010

Visual Arts Center of New Jersey

Lisa Pressman, Solo Show
Opening Reception: January 19th, 2010 6pm-8pm
January 15 – March 19, 2010

The Dana Women Artists Series
Illusive Balance: Transcendental Pattern and Layered Surface
March 17-April 28
Lisa Pressman, Debra Ramsay, Nicole Ianuzelli and Marsha Goldberg
Douglass College Library,
New Brunswick, NJ

Rosenfeld Gallery
Philadelphia, PA

Solo Show, October 2010


6@ 10 x10 wax and ink on paper LPressman@2009