Marylyn Dintenfass Exhibition

Driscoll Babcock Galleries

poster for Marylyn Dintenfass Exhibition

This event has ended.

A focus of the show is the Angel Trumpet flower, a ravishing and singular beauty of nature whose exquisite deadliness is iconic. Dintenfass’ vibrant abstractions of the Angel Trumpet’s shapes and forms conjure the plant’s stunning looks, its siren-like allure, and its toxicity.

“Dintenfass’ latest work reaffirms her position as a significant figure in the rich tradition of colorists who explore the potent and evocative union of representation and abstraction: figures like James Turrell, Richard Diebenkorn, Mark Rothko, Morris Louis, Paul Klee, Henri Matisse and Paul Gauguin, all of whom she continues to respect,” remarks John Driscoll, President of Driscoll Babcock. Driscoll also pointed to the paintings’ “more overt sexual sensuousness in the metaphorical anatomical references in which the dangerous and sinister flower forms conjure genital appendages and vaginal slits in pulsing colors.” Dintenfass has always loved the interplay of blessings and curses, and in this new series of paintings she has increased the scale, heightened the chromatic intensity and simplified the visual layering to produce a powerful and graphic visual.

Critic Lilly Wei has written that Dintenfass’ painting is “[l]ush but also astringent, with a glittered coolness and reserve that offsets its heat…a bracing example of an experiential painting for the present,” In this remarkable group of new large scale paintings, Dintenfass has surely found the duality of the lush and the astringent, the tantalizing and the toxic.

Dintenfass, while not an inherent naturalist, explores extreme wilderness adventure as a visual and creative reboot from fine art, to “completely drain my visual reservoirs of everything extraneous and fill my senses with fresh colors, shapes and forms, textures, light and shadows that renew and reenergize my creative vision,” explains the artist. Riding white-water rapids on the Snake River, heli-hiking on a remote mountain of British Columbia, trekking the depths of Bryce Canyon, Dintenfass recognizes the peril of chance encounters with venomous snakes, predatory animals and toxic plants. She adds, “Often, the best interaction with nature is through a plate glass window. In DROP DEAD GORGEOUS, the lithe and beautiful plants that serve as the subject won’t just make you sick, but they are lethal. They kill you.”

As in her previous work, the symbolic layering of intellectual and psychological themes is reinforced by figural layerings of transparent color and the removal of built up surfaces. DROP DEAD GORGEOUS evokes literal and ephemeral interpretations, reinforced by her method of paint application and removal, where she unites hardedge painting with soft brushstrokes. Her transparent layers of oil paint and the luminescence she achieves from her nuanced mixing of colors and navigating a gestural relationship between light, line, and chroma. Dintenfass’ new large-scale paintings include diptychs and triptychs, amongst single-panel paintings, and as always, metaphors of her own intricate relationship with visual reality and hidden duplicity.

Media

Schedule

from November 17, 2012 to January 26, 2013

Opening Reception on 2012-11-17 from 16:00 to 19:00

  • Facebook

    Reviews

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