Monday, June 02, 2008

Obsessive Reductive














Obsessive Reductive
, my first curatorial effort, opens at the Hogar Collection in Williamsburg on June 13 from 6-9:30 PM. It's a group show with work by six abstract artists, including a piece of mine. We published a catalog for the show, which will be available at the gallery. The show announcement is below; for more information contact the gallery at 718 388 5022 or visit their website.














“OBSESSIVE REDUCTIVE”

Catalog essay by Peter Barrett

Michael McCaffrey’s seeming monochromes are in fact compositions of circles, bands, crosses, and targets- archetypal divisions of the square- made of two extremely similar yet slightly complementary colors. The close colors, applied with foam rollers for a blended edge, makes for a subtle but intense vibration that never quite resolves; they insist upon their instability with a quiet force, to the point where one has the feeling that they continue to pulse even in the absence of observing eyes.

Heather Hutchison also divides the square, but in her work the physical depth of the pieces and nature of the materials makes light both the subject and literal object. Appearing by turns natural, like sky over water, then synthetic, like a road or a wall, they become stand-ins for our experience of the sublime: glowing, yet confined within a box; gorgeous, but partially obscured. Her meticulous use of materials, and the balance between the hard-edged (plywood, plexi) and the liquid (wax, paint) allow her to wring a startling variety of experiences from a few elements.

Miki Lee uses a deceptively simple device: non-repeating colors defined by undulating contours. The varied results show just how much energy can spring from adjusting a few parameters: whether they ignore or are bound by the edge of the canvas, to what degree each color is influenced by its neighbors- whether in color, or contour, or both- and where the palette is keyed for each painting all have dramatic impact on the outcome. The result is a dynamic equilibrium- a tension between busy and tranquil- that creates perpetual motion.

Peter Fox has a very different take on the possibility for complexity to emerge from a narrow set of rules. Letting gravity pull his paint toward the floor, he intervenes as it drips, creating fascinating intricacies where hand, accident, and physics all contribute. The resulting layers of color upon color read as a kind of super-dense language, so the paintings seem constructed not just out of paint, but of paint deliberately formed into something more than itself- paint imbued with intelligence, that can form, be, and explain a painting all at once. All of this seething syntactical energy takes place within the boundaries of traditional canvas squares and rectangles, at once emphasizing and superseding the medium.

Cecilia Biagini’s shim pieces use off-the-shelf materials to create playfully elegant forms that transcend their humble origins. She uses the subtle variations in length from shim to shim and a careful awareness of the ways in which the wedges can compound into curves- and also cancel them out- to generate richly varied undulations. The bright, saturated colors she uses seem random up close, but from farther away they create a sense of light across the whole piece, acting as an almost chiaroscuro modeling that gives an added sense of volume and drama to each work.

Peter Barrett works principally in painted reliefs- paintings that edge into the third dimension without becoming fully sculptural. Painted in gradated bands, they simultaneously evoke both extremes of several visual vocabularies: analog/digital, organic/geometric, natural/synthetic, and scientific/psychedelic. By varying the form and color, and moving between symmetry and asymmetry, he creates hybrid forms that push painting into the third dimension without giving up its essential nature; the object and its surface fuse together and become inseparable.

The six diverse artists in this show are all exploring rich post-minimalist pictorial terrain, achieving rich results within narrow constraints. While at first glance all their work appears to share the same cool, detached quality that characterizes much reductive work, upon closer examination all these pieces are clearly made by hand. The resulting imperfections and vicissitudes, rather than hindering the results, are in fact essential to the effect; the handmade surfaces give the works a warmth and depth that belies their formal rigor. By means of such deliberate engagement with the defining tension of painting- between illusion and material- all of the works in this show elegantly subvert initial impressions and thus affirm the continuing relevance of handmade images in the digital age.

Thursday, May 08, 2008

"...66 pieces..." at Haim Chanin

"Bolt" will be in a group show entitled "...66 pieces of art on the wall..." at Haim Chanin Fine Art in New York. The show opens Friday, May 9, and there will be a reception on June 11. The gallery is located at 121 W. 19th st, 10th floor. For more information, contact the gallery at 646 230 7200 or visit their website.

... 66 pieces of art on the wall...
May 9 - July 12, 2008

Opening
Friday, May 9, 2008 6-8 PM

Reception for the artists
Wednesday, June 11, 2008 6-8 PM

Haim Chanin Fine Arts is pleased to announce … 66 pieces of art on the wall…, a selection of works by artists regularly shown, championed and collected by Haim Chanin Fine Arts, on view from May 9 through July 12, 2008. The opening will take place on Friday, May 9, 2008, from 6 to 8 PM and there will be a reception for the artists on June 11, 2008, 6-8 PM. The exhibition will feature approximately 70 works – sculptures, works on paper, paintings, by 34 contemporary artists:

Frederic Amat, Jose-Maria Armenter, Peter Barrett, Mary Bennett, Anna Bialobroda, Pierrette Bloch, Robert Bowen, Gulsen Calik, Jonathan Callan, Joaquim Chancho, Vicky Colombet, Christine Crozat, Edith Derdyk, Evru, Jean-Michel Fauquet, Catherine Gfeller, Angel Haro, Virginia Katz, Seth Kaufman, John Kelly, Dominique Labauvie, Jeannette Leroy, Matta, Paul Moran, Jorge Oteiza, Heribert C. Otterbach, Jaume Plensa, Raquel Rabinovich, Ofelia Rodriguez, Dominica Sanchez, Eduardo Santiere, Pierre Soulages, Harvey Tulcensky, Lucia Warck Meister

By choosing from favorite works and approaching the installation in an improvisational, associative salon-style hanging, Haim Chanin Fine Arts attempts with this exhibition to offer the viewer an intimate and subjective look at artworks, far from the neutrality “de rigueur” in galleries or museums. The exhibition weaves stories between the artworks while creating unexpected interpretations and dialogues the way a collector would in his/her home. In this sense, the exhibition is a celebration of the art collection as an expression of an individual’s taste, personality and vision, rather than a financial venture, a social status or a trendy commodity.

Haim Chanin Fine Arts continues in its commitment to bring established and renowned artists from Europe and Latin America to New York. Following this exhibition, the gallery will present an exhibition of works by American artist Paul Moran (Fall 08). Haim Chanin Fine Arts is located in the heart of the city, between the Flat Iron District, West Chelsea and Union Square, at 121 W 19St, between 6th and 7th Avenues.

For further information on this exhibition, please contact Mathilde Simian at (646) 230-7200 or msimian@haimchanin.com.

Boston Drawing Project

Five of my drawings have been selected for the flat file exhibition "The Boston Drawing Project" at the Bernard Toale gallery in Boston, MA. They will be available for viewing until October. For more information, contact the gallery at 617 482-2477 or via their website.

Wednesday, January 02, 2008

Painting Process

Two of my recent pieces and the drawings they resulted from will be in "Painting Process" at the Walsh Gallery at Seton Hall University in South Orange, NJ. The show will run from January 14- February 15, with an opening reception Thursday, January 17 from 5-9 PM. For more information, please visit the gallery website.

Sunday, December 02, 2007

eyewash at Aqua Miami

Brooklyn's own eyewash gallery will have three of the pieces from "Morphologies" as well as five brand new drawings at the Aqua hotel fair in Miami Beach. Details are below, or you can check the Aqua or eyewash websites for more information. (Click image to enlarge.)

Thursday, September 20, 2007

Morphologies Press Release

Supreme Trading is pleased to announce Morphologies, a show of paintings by Peter Barrett. This is his second solo show in New York, and his first in Brooklyn. His work has been included in two previous group shows at Supreme Trading. The title of the show refers to the study of forms across many disciplines- among them astronomy, linguistics, biology, and architecture- all of which inform Barrett’s work. The pieces on view in this show continue his exploration of shaped paintings on cut and routed MDF that push painting into the third dimension without quite becoming sculpture.

Spanning a wide range of forms, and encompassing opposing visual languages- organic/geometric, natural/synthetic, analog/digital, and scientific/psychedelic- Barrett’s work creates an elegant tension between these extremes, with each piece offering a unique combination of references that reveal new relationships between far-flung visual vocabularies and disciplines.

Included in the show will be Mycelium, a new site-specific wall installation that continues Barrett’s practice of painting walls around multiple relief elements that are composed on site. Mycelium involves elongated, rounded forms of MDF painted in gradations from black to white arranged on a wall painted with different concentric bands of modulated color. The effect partially dissolves the wall, enabling the viewer to enter into a space of uncertain scale and finite depth; Barrett refers to this as “optical space” and its creation is a trademark effect of all his work, regardless of scale.

Morphologies will run from September 28 through October 30. Gallery hours are Monday- Friday from 5-9 PM, and Saturday and Sunday from 1-9 PM.

There will be an opening reception on Friday, September 28, from 7-10 PM.

For more information, please call 718 599 4224 or email judy@supremetradingny.com

Tuesday, September 18, 2007

Morphologies

Opening Friday, September 28 at Supreme Trading in Brooklyn, a solo show of my work from the last year or two. It runs until October 28. Gallery hours are Tuesday to Friday from 5-9 PM and Saturday & Sunday from 1-9 PM. I've been in two group shows there, and it's exciting to have the chance to fill the whole room, including the brand new pieces from this summer. To recieve an email or paper announcement, sign my guest book. For more information, contact me or the gallery.