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Laura Newman, Claire Seidl, Cordy Ryman Project Space: Judith
Page
Lesley Heller Gallery September 8–October 27, 2007
by Stephanie Buhman
Brooklyn Rail
October 2007
Though not conceived as a thematic show, Laura Newman,
Claire Seidl and Cordy Ryman have plenty in common. Most importantly,
they share a concern for architectural space; while realized in different
media and under the spell of different aesthetics, these individual
accounts are told in the same language. All three artists loosely
reflect on the denominators defining the built environment, whether
in urban settings or in nature. Their vocabulary, though not abstract,
is clearly abstracted, never striving too far from a hint of a reference
point.
Brooklyn-based painter Laura Newman aims to capture
open pictorial spaces. In her artist’s statement, she names “painting
air” as one of her ultimate ambitions. This, she notes, can
be achieved only by depicting things that air encapsulates. At times
reminiscent of Mary Heilman’s work, Newman’s compositions
fuse expressive planes of luminous color with highly stylized fragments
of rooftops, clouds, or electric wires. Color is employed as definite
light source, as well as an emotional correlative. Her work leaves
the impression of distinct sentiments that dramatize her graphically
simplified descriptive elements. She also employs a kind of improvisational
unpredictability that is as refreshing as it is unusual in hard-edged
geometric forms.
Working three-dimensionally primarily in wood and sometimes
found objects, Cordy Ryman creates playful constructs in saturated
color similar to Newman’s but translated into actual environments.
Reminiscent of Richard Tuttle or Jim Lee, Ryman’s objects are
shape and color experienced in space, incorporating the gallery wall
as point of departure. Protruding outward, they feel suspended between
two realities: their own self-contained existence and their dependence
on the surrounding architecture. They can be viewed as autonomous
structures as well as interrogations of our own interpretation of
our immediate surroundings.
At first glance, Claire Seidl’s works are the
toughest fit in this group. They are black and white photographs
that project a sense of classic structure, romanticism and mystery
that is missing in Newman or Ryman. The images often incorporate
a view through a window, the fragile divide between interior and
exterior space. Seidl’s photographs, however, do relate to
Newman’s paintings in the way they contrast concrete images
of chairs or trees with abstract planes generated by dramatic light
conditions and the soft focus due to infinitesimal camera movements
during long exposure times. Originally a painter, Seidl explains
her affinity for photography, which she began to pursue seriously
only over the past decade, by pointing to the camera’s ability
to capture “multiple layers of space and reflections in focus.” In
this context, the camera functions as both a memory aid and a magnifying
glass. Seidl’s work simultaneously uncovers and veils selected
slices of observable reality, drawing the imagination into those
parts we cannot see.
In addition to the main exhibition, a worthwhile installation
by Judith Page can be found in the gallery’s Project Space.
Entitled “Finalists,” it consists of various portraits
on paper of the forgotten competitors from television shows such
as “American Idol.” By focusing on those who enjoyed
a brief moment in the spotlight before vanishing into oblivion, Page
has hit upon a poignant metaphor. This installation charts the discrepancies
between memories of the past and the reality of the present. In a
video posted on the gallery website, Page sums it up: this work is
about the giddiness of hope.
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