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The
exhibition features:
B.C. Binning, Ronald Bloore, Paul-Emile Borduas, Jack Bush, Marcelle
Ferron, Tom Hodgson, Jacques Hurtubise, Gershon Iskowitz, Alex Janvier,
Garry Neill Kennedy, Roy Kiyooka, Rita Letendre, Alexandra Luke,
Jock Macdonald, Ron Martin, Guido Molinari, Marion Nicoll, Graham
Peacock, William Ronald, Claude Tousignant and Harold Town.
This
exhibition from the University of Lethbridge Art Gallery's permanent
collection focuses on abstract painting in Canada from the 1950's
to the 1990's.
By
the late 1970's, abstract painting was slowly losing its primacy
if innovative place in Canada to practices such as installation,
photography, video, and performance.
Perhaps
Canadian art historian Mark Cheetham's understanding of post-modern
art's compulsion with memory can explain why non-objective painters
over the past decade have begun to revisit works by the Automatistes,
Painters Eleven, Non-Figurative Art Association of Montreal, and
Regina Five.
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Absence
or Presence:
A Survey of Abstract Painting in Canada from 1950's to 1990's
Organized by the University of Lethbridge Art Gallery
"…
The presence or absence of a recognizable image has no more to do
with the value in painting or sculpture than the presence or absence
of a libretto has to do with the value of music …"
--
Clement Greenberg, "Abstract, Representational, and so forth", Art
and Culture (Boston: Beacon Press, 1961) p. 133
This exhibition
from the University of Lethbridge Art Gallery's permanent collection
focuses on abstract painting in Canada from the 1950's to the 1990's.
The absence or presence of discernible subjects in such a body of
work represents a key fluctuation in Modernism's cyclical nature.
Each artist's manipulation of colour, texture, form, and space appear
as immediate solutions to the problems of image making, when in
fact they are part of an aesthetic tradition that has existed for
over a hundreds years in Western Europe and North America.
The
show's signature work by B.C. Binning entitled "Black Island" is
indicative of the central position abstract art had gained in urban
Canadian cultural milieus by 1960. While the Vancouver-based painter's
reconstruction of a seascape is undoubtedly a summarized image in
the modernist sense, it does not completely depart from the recognizable.
Such an approach by this artist speaks to the influence that the
mid twentieth-century British figurative sculptor Henry Moore had
over him. Ultimately, Binning maintains the ancient Western tradition
of treating the canvas as a window onto a receding natural space,
which enables viewers to share a common associative experience.
Harold
Town's 1974 oil on linen "Snap #78" provides a fitting contrast
to Binning's piece for it completely releases easel painting from
its primordial link to an observable reality, and evokes an incredible
surface play of colour and line. The image now becomes a screen
rather than a window that has been produced by loading lengths of
string with unmixed oil paints and snapping them across the stretched
linen. Town along with William Ronald, Jock MacDonald and Jack Bush,
who are also represented in this show, were members of the Toronto
group Painters Eleven from 1953 to 1960. Their respective experiments
with non-objective imagery through the 1960's and 1970's carried
the increasing authority that the New York art scene has exerted
over this country's visual arts since the Second World War's close.
Undoubtedly,
the most highly regarded supporter of Abstract Expressionism and
Post Painterly Abstraction in United States through the 1950's and
1960's was the New York City art critic Clement Greenberg, whose
visits with artists in Central and Western Canada were considered
monumental events. The unpremeditated rendering processes and juxtapositions
of colour fields that he championed, with regard to the work of
artists such as Jackson Pollock and Barnett Newman, would reverberate
in Canada for decades to come.
Ron Martin's
employment of preconscious gestures to create "Dioxidine Purple"
appears as yet another innovation in the practice of non-objective
imagery. However, the lasting immediacy of action that the London
artist's acrylic on canvas displays is related to strategies employed
by the Automatistes in the late 1940's. Paintings by Marcelle Ferron
and Paul-Emile Borduas, who were members of the aforementioned Montreal
collective, in this exhibition encourage viewers to embrace an idiosyncratic
understanding of artistic impulses, which stemmed from Surrealist
manifestos published in Paris during the 1930's.
Montreal
artist Rita Letendre's oeuvre exemplifies the constant oscillation
between the absence and presence of the subject in modernist Canadian
painting. Her work of the 1960's is rooted in automatic methods
and thus lacks any decipherable references, however, by the mid
1970's she was producing paintings, which were more firmly connected
to natural incidences. The bold colours and sharp diagonal lines
of her 1974 "Istar" suggest a radiating light source from beyond
the canvas. Letendre's membership in the Non-Figurative Artists'
Association of Montreal, which was established in 1956, served to
inform her practice for decades as it did for fellow members: Guido
Molinari and Claude Tousignant. Although their respective paintings
in this show from the late 1960's demonstrate a more complete rejection
of Euclidean space in favour of hypnotic optical effects.
Subtle
variations of blue in Roy Kiyooka's 1967 acrylic on canvas are used
to differentiate two large oval shapes, and while the image does
not proffer an overt bond to the world around us, it is dependent
upon a celestial occurrence. His title "Eclipse" thus reveals the
phenomenal basis for such a seemingly non-objective painting. Kiyooka's
early involvement with the artists, who came to be known as the
Regina Five in 1961, also articulates how abstract art's reach extended
beyond Canada's metropolitan communities to impact regional urban
centers.
Ron Bloore,
a member of the above Regina group, became famous for his white
on white paintings, which includes the untitled work in this show
that lacks both colour and subject. Among the artists featured in
Absence or Presence who operated outside a collective setting is
Alex Janvier. In the Dene painter's 1972 acrylic on canvas "As Strong
As A Bull" negative white areas take on cranium-like shapes that
are offset by whiplash lines and pools of pure colour. Such an interplay
links this work to that of another Alberta artist in this exhibition,
Marion Nicoll, who taught Janvier at Calgary's Provincial Institute
of Technology and Art, and her manipulation of positive and negative
space infers but never confirms a mountainous landscape.
By the
late 1970's, abstract painting was slowly losing its primacy if
innovative place in Canada to practices such as installation, photography,
video, and performance. Artists including Garry Neill Kennedy who
resided in Halifax, began to push the application of pigments on
canvas in a more conceptual direction. However, his meticulously
created 1978 piece in the exhibition is not wholly unrelated to
the mesmerizing colour field works from the 1960's mentioned earlier.
Despite the apparent avant-garde failure of Modernism through the
1980's, Toronto artist Gershon Iskowitz's 1986 painting "Sunlight
#1" forcefully renews the investigation of key aesthetic problems.
His flattening on the canvas' traditional illusionary space and
utilization of brilliant red, yellow, blue, purple, and green oils
is part of the same project that the French Impressionists initiated
during the late nineteenth century.
Perhaps
Canadian art historian Mark Cheetham's understanding of post-modern
art's compulsion with memory can explain why non-objective painters
over the past decade have begun to revisit works by the Automatistes,
Painters Eleven, Non-Figurative Art Association of Montreal, and
Regina Five. Edmonton-based artist Graham Peacock's 1992 "Aaron"
boldly looks to the past in its unadulterated celebration of colour
and texture, while his use of styrofoam supports, glass beads, and
reflective plastic strips on an organic shaped canvas breaks into
the future. Peacock is a member of the Canadian-American collective
called the New Painters, and they are reasserting the ebb and flow
of a subjective absence or presence in contemporary art making.
Curtis
Joseph Collins
Guest Curator
Images:
- "Black
Island", 1960, by B.C. Binning, Canadian (1909-1976).
35" x 42", oil on canvas. From The University of Lethbridge Art
Collection, gift of Mrs. Binning, 1987.
- "Fierce
Artificier", 1959, by Jock MacDonald, Canadian (1897-1960).
39" x 25", oil on canvas. From The University of Lethbridge Art
Collection, gift of Mrs. Dorothea Smart, 1993.
- "East
From the Mountains", 1961, by Marion Nicoll, Canadian
(1909-1985). 40" x 54", oil on canvas. From The University of
Lethbridge Art Collection, gift of Mr. Gordon Gibbs, 1982.
- "Dragon",
1963, by William Ronald, Canadian (1926-1998). 50" x 60",
oil on canvas. From The University of Lethbridge Art Collection,
acquired 1992.
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