Monday, September 21, 2015

Art Expo 2015





Japan, 19th C.


This piece reminds me of when the Merchandise Mart simultaneously hosted fairs in both antiques  and  contemporary art.  These days, there is no good reason for Art  Expo  to include a gallery of historic Asian collectables.  Apparently, somebody knows somebody.

However.... this piece offers  a happy contrast to the bulk of what the other galleries have on display.  Contemporary art either offers a puzzle, or it  screams " Woo-Hoo !Look at me! Look at me!"








As a traditional expression of a spiritual practice that had been in Japan for a thousand yeas, there is nothing puzzling about this image, nor anything innovative in its forms or  materials.

Something much more important is at stake.

Better examples of Buddhist sculpture can quickly be found --  but maybe not from the 19th C.





Nicholas Africano







Another anomaly in this show is  Nicholas Africano whose work has been shown by at least two different galleries  every year for at least a decade.

Apparently, there remains  a good market for his peaceful, moody, decorative kind of classical sculpture cast in glass.







Alfred Leslie, 1960

 Art Expo always offers many examples of mid-20th C. ABX painting. 

Many of them seem to record the dynamics of a struggling  human life - as well as dynamic designs and beautiful areas of color.






Last year, the art fair had examples of Leslie's later figurative work - which I also liked.

I'm guessing that he left abstraction when it stopped being essential to him. Good for him!





 






Alfred Leslie






Andy Pankhurst

There's never much contemporary figurative work  at these art fairs - but here's a nice one from a young British painter who paints the human figure as if it were an  apple in a still life.



Camilo  Restrepo

Here's a fragment of a wall size piece done by a young Columbian painter just out  of art school.





It offers endless visual variety -- and occasional fragments of text that advocate the legalization of drugs.


Jim Dine, 2015


I'm not a fan of Pop Art.

But Jim Dine is one helluva  ABX painter as he turns 80.


 



BTW - it turns out that he's from Cincinnati -- and we both went to the same high school.


 





Eric Fischl

Hah!  Here's a life-size depiction of people at an art fair




Here's my own version -- with yet one more fair-goer in the foreground to the left.





Eva Hesse


 
I feel her sculpture was joke-art, but this earlier painting by Eva Hesse is quite expressive.




Gertrude Abercrombie, 1946


This is an  early work by a painter who has never disappointed me.  The gallerista told me that the young Edward Gorey met and greatly admired her.  That's not surprising, is it ?







Andrew Holmquist

Here's a young painter from small-town Minnesota who consistently blows me away.  He just got an MFA last year

I wonder how far his human figures will ever emerge from his bodacious designs.  On the internet, you can find examples of his figurative illustrations for children's books.

If he could draw a more naturalistic figure, he could compete with the great Italian Mannerists like Pontormo.




















John Little, 1960

Here's another great ABX painter that Thomas McCormick has brought back for an encore

This wall sized piece feels like an epic.









 


Franz Kline, Study for 9th Street, 1951


Franz Kline insisted that he was not influenced by the tradition of Asian calligraphy, even though he's doing much the same thing as he designs a balanced component that will then be expressed as gesture.

The tragedy of the contemporary artworld is that it will not allow this practice to be developed as a  tradition.




Kurt Lewy, 1959

Here's a Belgian abstract painter that McCormick has brought in.

It looks like the floor plan for an inescapable maze.





Catherine Maize


Like the stone Buddha at the top of  this post, here's a painting that's less concerned with attracting attention than in holding it.






Mark Calderon


This sculptor does not specialize in animals -- but  he's very good with reptiles.

This piece reminds me of  Albert Laessle's turtle  that I saw at the Met last year.











Matt Bahen


This young Canadian painter makes me feel the heat and smell the smoke in this remote, backwoods location.  This painting is not about scenery - it's about experience.





Pam Sheehan

Here's another painting about  experiencing a place  - -- though, in this case it's at the center rather than the periphery of our civilization.

This is Fifth Avenue, New York -- right outside the Met on a rainy day.







Milton Resnick


I don't really like belly aches -- but looking at one is not so painful.







Not many paintings  take nausea as  their subject matter.






Sam Francis, 1965


As I've read, there was a period in this artist's career when he left large unpainted areas of white in  the center of his canvas.  As if he were drawing aside the colorful curtains on a stage for which there was  no performance.




 
John Santoro


I've always liked his paintings, which are as much about landscape as they are about paint.

He's another artist who was shown by two different galleries at the show.





Tam Van Tran

The viewer seems to be looking up from the basement of a building that's just been blown up.





Toshio Miyaoka

I've craved  more pool scenes like this ever since I saw one by  David Hockney






Werner Drewes, 1939


This painting, by a renowned teacher of abstract painting, has a rather dry, academic feeling to it.

But that, too, is part of life -- and I tend to feel good whenever an attractive young woman is not fully clothed.









David Park, 1957



Here are some naked young dudes who also appear to be doing nothing more than posing in the studio - and I like that too.




Tragically, this was done near the end of the artist's  brief life.







 
Raimonds Staprands

This is the sort of thing that I expect to see at the Ukrainian Institute of Modern  Art here in Chicago.

The artist was Latvian via Southern California.















Qin Yufen
 
 

This Chinese painter has regretfully taken her colorful, stringy shapes off the canvas and begun installing them around the gallery.






 



















Judith Goodwin, 1960


Here's another survivor from that second wave of abstract expressionists.

If you want to feel struggle and antgst -- she's got it.





 









Judith Goodwin, 1982


Her life feels more comfortable now -- but I still feel the edges of anxiety.




 










Emelio Vedova, 1962
 
 
 

This is the European version of ABX













David Sharpe

This looks like the map of a large, posh resort.

The artist must have moved into a happier place




 





 














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