Joseph Raffael “JR@Eighty”

Nancy Hoffman Gallery

poster for Joseph Raffael “JR@Eighty”

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Nancy Hoffman Gallery presents an exhibition of monumental watercolors by Joseph Raffael, “JR@Eighty”. The work in this show comprises three themes: gardens in refulgent bloom, shells and fossils, and the Japanese koi pond, in a word nature; the overriding theme that has engaged the artist not only for the past three years, but also for his entire practice of painting. The new work is more intimate, more intense, more filled with light and splendor. This is “Joseph Land,” the title of David Pagel’s essay for the catalogue accompanying the show, where the sun is always shining, and magic awaits.

Twenty-five years ago, Joseph Raffael and his wife Lannis moved to the South of France, wanting to simplify life so that Joseph could devote himself to painting without distraction. Over this quarter century, the couple, who live in a simple home overlooking the Mediterranean Sea, have created what might be called “Joseph Land.” Lannis planted a garden “sauvage,” in the midst of ancient trees and bushes and succulents, with flowers of every color of the rainbow. They created two koi ponds on the property, framed by stones the Mediterranean has washed smooth over millennia. The flowering plants matured, the carp grew large, the birds in the outdoor aviaries multiplied, and with the years, an earthly paradise blossomed. It is this paradise teeming with life force that provides the artist with his subjects: flowers, koi, birds, shells, the abundance of the gardens that surround their house.

New in this work is a sense of time, time passing, the urgency of the moment: a pond captured in a summer breeze, never to appear with the same shimmer or ripples again; a garden dense in foliage, with flowers peeking through a tapestry of myriad greens, a moment in springtime’s warmth. Selecting the “Moment” series with the garden subtitle “You Can’t Step Into the Same River Twice,” is an indication the artist has time on his mind as he turns a new decade. These are not images of nature, these are abstractions inspired by nature, they are resplendent reflections on life, meditations on what it means to be alive. Each work is an ode to life in multi-color, “jewel-encrusted” passages of watercolor. These are watercolors to “fall into,” to roam about in and to explore. They are not quickly viewed or experienced. Every square inch is filled with rich color, interweaving squiggles, and lines and circles and facets, and juxtapositions that frolic and play with the mind and the eye, colors that cavort energetically across the paper, and cohabit joyfully. Simply stated Raffael’s new work is a celebration of life.

David Pagel writes of Raffael’s work:

“If you come to one of Raffael’s pictures of flowers or fish or water or seashells and crystals with an open mind, and believe that you have not seen it all, then it’s likely that you will begin to see things you’ve never seen before, much less articulated, imagined, or grasped in the core of your being.

“That’s when the magic happens.

“And that’s the whole point of Raffael’s patiently painted pictures of readily identifiable flora and fauna. These intensely focused images, made up of innumerable dabs, strokes, and touches of a brush’s paint-saturated hairs, find freedom in discipline, or boundlessness in structure, and, in so doing, invite views to dive more deeply into the mysteries of ourselves, which, in the universe Raffael paints, have lots in common with the mysteriousness of others.”

Joseph Raffael was born in Brooklyn, New York in 1933. He attended Cooper Union, New York and received his B.F.A. from Yale School of Fine Arts. While at Yale he studied with Josef Albers. He also received a Fulbright Fellowship to Florence and Rome.

Media

Schedule

from March 21, 2013 to May 04, 2013

Artist(s)

Joseph Raffael

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