Jonathan VanDyke “The Painter of the Hole”

Scaramouche

poster for Jonathan VanDyke “The Painter of the Hole”

This event has ended.

Scaramouche presents The Painter of the Hole, Jonathan VanDyke’s second solo exhibition with the gallery. VanDyke’s new work carries with it the signifiers of painting, and yet he has pushed and pulled painting in such a way that it comes back to the viewer as something else. The new work evolves from his wall-mounted and free-standing sculptures, first exhibited at Scaramouche in 2009, that “perform” as they continuously drip paint directly onto the floor, and from his many recent live performances, in which actors and dancers move silently for hours while paint drips upon them and passes from body to body. VanDyke undoes media-specific boundaries as he re-orients modernist conventions, conflating painting with fiber arts, fashion, dance, textile design, and photography. Involving multiple collaborators and processes, the work subverts notions of painting’s singularity and challenges the idea of individual authorship.

The title of the exhibit is borrowed from a series made by George Grosz in the late 1940s. Grosz portrayed a figure who, searching for a new vocabulary of making, found himself endlessly painting an image of a hole. Into this void VanDyke proposes, “painting not as a form so much as a restless mood, a conduit, a matrix that includes the making, presenting, perceiving, desiring, acquiring and physical decaying of paintings…I want to perform The Painter and perform painting, this stubborn manner of coloring that doggedly mirrors, marks, and circles us.”

A series of large-scale, sewn canvas works in the exhibit evolved from a long-term collaboration with the dancers Bradley Teal Ellis and David Rafael Botana, who are also a couple. In a durational, live performance entitled Cordoned Area, the two improvise from VanDyke’s score, wrestling, dancing, and negotiating each other’s bodies while liquid paint drips and seeps from their costumes: they start clean and conclude covered in sweat and color. In the midst of spectators, Ellis and Botana publicly navigate that space between a performed and an actual relationship. Following Cordoned Area, VanDyke then invited the two back to the studio to work with him away from public view. Ellis and Botana interpret VanDyke’s directions, moving atop raw canvas while he inserts paint into their clothes. VanDyke writes that they “make their relationship, not a painting; the paint is simply an unconscious trace of their interaction”. This studio process results in a group of massive, stained canvases. VanDyke uses the canvases as raw material, cutting them into pieces and intermixing them to form opulent geometric patterns, and then sewing them back together. The patterns themselves reference 19th century Amish quilts, Sonia Delauney fabric designs, the pants of Picasso’s harlequins, the brickwork of a modern Danish housing block - patterns found next to and near the body.

Each painting is displayed on a partition placed in the midst of space. The backsides of the paintings, with their web of seams, are revealed, while the walls of the gallery remain empty. Hanging behind each painting is a photograph. For the creation of this series, Ellis and Botana’s canvases (in their uncut stage) were used as backdrop and floor in elaborate studio sets. Models strike poses that exist somewhere between private ritual and fashion shoot. This image of the still body in front of the marked canvas recalls VanDyke’s own 2011 solo performance The Long Glance, in which he stood and stared at a major Jackson Pollock work for 40 hours, making himself immobile in front of an “action” painting. The photographs also reference the work of artists who used the camera to explore private realms aside of their primary practice, such as the 1920’s self-portraits of Gertrud Arndt, an important fiber artist at the Bauhaus, and the charged tableau of George Platt Lynes, who made elaborately staged photos of performers, his lovers and friends. The heavily made-up models in VanDyke’s series wear Mondrian necklaces and Jackson Pollock jeans amidst ab ex curtains and geometric partitions. We are reminded that, despite the value and language we add to it, despite the relentless preservation of its surfaces, painting exists, too, as swaths of fabric: like an outfit or piece of clothing, it moves out into the world, embedded with its own histories, posing and projecting meaning, always becoming something else.

Jonathan VanDyke is a visual artist based in New York City.

Media

Schedule

from May 05, 2013 to June 23, 2013

Opening Reception on 2013-05-05 from 17:00 to 20:00

  • Facebook

    Reviews

    All content on this site is © their respective owner(s).
    New York Art Beat (2008) - About - Contact - Privacy - Terms of Use