VON LINTEL GALLERY

Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Antonio Murado. Terras | Wall Street International

 Antonio Murado. Terras

24 October – 7 December 2013 at Von Lintel Gallery, New York.

Antonio Murado. Terras
 Von Lintel Gallery is pleased to announce an exhibition of new paintings by the Spanish artist Antonio Murado.
Murado's canvases are feats of technical virtuosity, demonstrating his facility with paint and ability to create paintings that are at once both abstract and representational. From a distance, this new body of work appears to approach photographic realism, but when viewed more closely the rural landscape imagery dissolves entirely. Murado is interested in the idea that our eye seeks recognizable forms, finding a visual narrative where there are only brushstrokes. Several of the new paintings include a solid block of bright color that stands in contrast to the subtlety and depth of the rest of the canvas—a continuation of Murado's interest in juxtaposing movement with stillness and transparency with solidity. These bold vivid bands interrupt the suggestion of the nineteenth-century landscape painting, blending tradition and innovation to surprise and captivate.

Murado has exhibited internationally for over two decades. His work is held by many major Spanish museums and is included in important public and private collections throughout Europe and the United States. Murado's paintings have been written about extensively in Spain and the numerous publications that have reviewed his work in the United States include ArtForum and The New York Times. Born in Lugo, Spain, the artist currently lives and works in New York.


Original link to Wall Street International

Terras. Antonio Murado | Tectonicablog


Los lienzos de Antonio Murado son hazañas de virtuosismo técnico, que demuestran su facilidad con la pintura y la capacidad para crear obras que son a la vez abstractas y figurativas. Desde la distancia, este nuevo conjunto de trabajos parece acercarse al realismo fotográfico, pero cuando se mira más de cerca las imágenes de paisaje rural se disuelven por completo. Murado está interesado en la idea de que nuestro ojo busca formas reconocibles, la búsqueda de una narración visual donde sólo hay pinceladas.

DBP 2, 2013. Óleo sobre lienzo
Varias de las nuevas pinturas incluyen un bloque sólido de color brillante que está en contraste con la sutileza y la profundidad del resto de la tela —una continuación del interés de Murado en la yuxtaposición del movimiento con la quietud y la transparencia con la solidez—. Estas bandas audazmente intensas interrumpen la sugerencia de la pintura de paisaje del siglo XIX, combinando la tradición y la innovación para sorprender y cautivar.

Lake, 2013. Óleo sobre lienzo.

Murado ha expuesto a nivel internacional desde hace más de dos décadas. Su trabajo está en muchos de los principales museos españoles y en importantes colecciones públicas y privadas de Europa y Estados Unidos. Sobre sus pinturas se ha escrito extensamente en España y numerosas publicaciones han revisado su trabajo en Estados Unidos, incluyendo ArtForum y The New York Times. Nacido en Lugo, actualmente reside y trabaja en Nueva York.


Lake, 2013. Óleo sobre lienzo.
 Read original review @ Tectonicablog

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

ANTONIO MURADO | Terras - Selected Works

Antonio Murado, Untitled (1021), 2013
oil on linen
44 x 59 inches (111.8 x 149.9 cm)
Antonio Murado, Land (#1), 2013
oil on linen
60 x 80 inches (152.4 x 203.2 cm)
Antonio Murado, Land (#2), 2013
oil on linen
40 x 50 inches (101.6 x 127 cm)


Antonio Murado, Land (#3), 2013
oil on linen
40 x 60 inches (101.6 x 152.4 cm)
Antonio Murado, Land (#4), 2013,
oil on linen
38 x 56 inches (96.5 x 142.2 cm)
Antonio Murado, Land (#5), 2013,
oil on linen
38 x 56 inches (96.5 x 142.2 cm)




ANTONIO MURADO | Terras : Opening Reception Oct 24, 6—8 PM


Antonio Murado
Untitled (1021), 2013
oil on linen
44 x 59 inches (111.8 x 149.9 cm)
Von Lintel Gallery is pleased to announce an exhibition of new paintings by the Spanish artist Antonio Murado.

Murado's canvases are feats of technical virtuosity, demonstrating his facility with paint and ability to create paintings that are at once both abstract and representational. From a distance, this new body of work appears to approach photographic realism, but when viewed more closely the rural landscape imagery dissolves entirely. Murado is interested in the idea that our eye seeks recognizable forms, finding a visual narrative where there are only brushstrokes. Several of the new paintings include a solid block of bright color that stands in contrast to the subtlety and depth of the rest of the canvas—a continuation of Murado's interest in juxtaposing movement with stillness and transparency with solidity. These bold vivid bands interrupt the suggestion of the nineteenth-century landscape painting, blending tradition and innovation to surprise and captivate.

Murado has exhibited internationally for over two decades. His work is held by many major Spanish museums and is included in important public and private collections throughout Europe and the United States. Murado's paintings have been written about extensively in Spain and the numerous publications that have reviewed his work in the United States include ArtForum and The New York Times. Born in Lugo, Spain, the artist currently lives and works in New York.

Thursday, October 17, 2013

ROSEMARIE FIORE | Shooting for Fireworks — Haber Arts Review

By John Haber

Sometimes artists shoot for fireworks. Maybe they have to, in a competitive art scene—especially if they dare to make “just painting.”

They also get to break one last border. After abstraction and representation, new media and old, outsider art and insiders, why not canvas and spectacle? For her “smoke paintings,” Rosemarie Fiore does not need to set off fireworks, at least literally. She does not, though, shy away from the metaphor.

She, Caetano de Almeida, and Reed Danziger all spin wildly or deliberately off the grid. That does not, however, preclude a conceptual underpinning. For Fiore, at von Lintel through October 19, the concept is obvious: she is painting with colored smoke. It stains paper, which she then cuts into small disks and pastes down. The work still functions more as painting than collage.

For all the fireworks, she is building on regular elements, like late Modernism. In a gallery that also shows the fictive brushwork of Mark Sheinkman and Stephen Ellis, the patterning of Valerie Jaudon, and the illusion of natural processes in Catherine Howe and Joseph Stashkevetch, Fiore’s smoke and mirrors fit right in. Her colored circles also recall Robert Delauney and inventing abstraction. They form spirals, connected by broader arcs that stain more freely, without the sharp edges of a knife. Sometimes the patterns bounce off one another and ricochet back. They never quite explode, but then they already have.

de Almeida, at Eleven Rivington through October 13, also has ties to early Modernism. The Brazilian artist favors colored grids that overwhelm the senses and, often as not, his own compositions. For once, though, he adopts sparer and more regular lines, although they still refuse to behave. Sometimes their departure from the vertical brings them closer to gray spheres, as if pulled by a magnetic field. The more rounded spheres look right out of Fernand Léger and his icy humanism. The quaintness works better, though, when the field takes on a logic of its own.

Danziger, at McKenzie and also through October 13, is most obviously at home in three dimensions. Like Fiore, she lends works on paper the scale of painting. Her pen and ink twists into depth, clustering around colored planes in gouache and watercolor, like solar panels or the vanes of a fan in high winds. The sheer density and the emptiness of surrounding paper both recall Julie Mehretu, but without the grandeur of imagined landscapes. Rather, motion itself becomes the subject. So does the potential for human transformation, as art tackles science.

Does art have to shoot for fireworks? Sure, painting as contemplation is so modernist, and installations, alas, have everyone looking for spectacle. For now, though, one might as well enjoy it. Once transformation becomes subject matter, one can also think of future possibilities. Danziger is interested, he says, in “the moment” when “new patterns begin to take form.” If one cannot have fireworks, one can always collect the ashes.

Read original review @ haberarts.com

Friday, October 4, 2013

ROSEMARIE FIORE | Firework Drawings at SCAD-Atlanta — Burnaway Review



Rosemarie Fiore, Firework Drawing #20, 2009. Lit firework residue on paper.
By Andrew Alexande

There’s an intriguing radioactive instability of incompatible elements in any action painting. There’s the stillness and permanence of the created object, but then there’s also the implied volatility, noise, and irretrievability of the activity itself, still semi-present in its lasting traces, but ultimately insurmountably past. When the action is literally explosive, that juxtaposition becomes even more manifest. 

New York-based artist Rosemarie Fiore’s Firework Drawings, at SCAD-Atlanta’s Gallery 1600 through December 6, is a selection of large works on paper created through the use of live fireworks and colored smoke bombs. Fiore refers to the pieces as drawings: Most are titled Firework Drawing and then numbered in a series. But the activity that created them, particularly the application of color in the form of smoke, and the resulting work seem closer kin to painting—perhaps even suggesting a playful literalization of the famous Renaissance mode of painting, sfumato (smoked), the use of smokelike borderless gradations between darkness and light to give a sense of the depth of solid forms (Fiore has worked as an art restorer in Europe and has pointed to Renaissance masters as a source of inspiration). The artist deploys a variety of colored smoke bombs, jumping jacks, monster balls, and rings of fire to create her work, using coffee cans, buckets, and other containers to transfer the pigment-rich smoke onto paper.

Rosemarie Fiore creating a firework drawing, 2009. Courtesy of the artist.
Rosemarie Fiore creating a firework drawing, 2009. Courtesy of the artist.
In the past she has likewise taken up a wide variety of unusual objects as part of her practice: waffle irons, lawn mowers, pinball machines, and floor polishers. It’s mark-making as collaboration, often with objects designed for other uses—indeed, seemingly resistant to their use as a brush or tool in an aesthetic process, but often surprisingly pliant, their resistance to control part of their enhancive effect. One might be tempted to identify her purely as a conceptual artist, but the aesthetic rigor of the work itself often stands powerfully independent of any conceptual underpinnings

“I’ve chosen to collaborate with machines,” the artist has said. “I use machines as mark-making tools. For me, paint just isn’t enough.” Actually, she seems fine with the paint; it’s the brush—its illusion of precision, its predictability, its obeisance, its specific design for its purpose—and perhaps the supposed authority of the painter’s hand holding it, that she has rejected.

Rosemarie Fiore, Firework Drawing #13, 2009. Lit firework residue on paper
 Fiore’s work is charged with energy and a strange, almost perspectival depth, a richly suggestive and active field, or set of fields. Although most of the firework pieces have dark backgrounds—Fiore places cut paper, often in layered circles on surfaces, all stained in powdery daubs and streaks by smoke—the most successful works are the ones whose backgrounds are left more intriguingly bare, the traces of smoke less deeply saturated but their subtle, gemlike gradations more evident. Here the circles of paper seemingly float above the surface, their active interplay of depth more apparent against the white background, as in Firework Drawing #13. The work here seems to engage with cosmic themes of void and chaos, planetary and molecular motion. 

The drawings suggest the famous 1960s fire paintings of Yves Klein, though I think Klein’s work radiates a sense of existential terror, heat, sex, violence, and destruction, a post-apocalyptic non-landscape, and these issues don’t seem as germane to Fiore in her colorful, almost celebratory, pieces. Contemporary Chinese artist Cai Guo-Qiang similarly works with gunpowder, the material itself indicative of war and destruction, the resulting beautifully bleak work often suggestive of their aftermath. In all of these artists’ work, there is, of course, a moment of violent “destruction” channeled as creation, leaving behind an object of mysterious beauty. It’s violence and chaos, if not controlled, then at least directed by the artist’s will. The work argues for the aesthetic of the release of authorial control. Perhaps it might be even taken as a working definition of the artistic process in general: the conscious manipulation—but never quite conquered—movement of the chaotic and ultimately uncontrollable forces of matter.

Read original review @ Burnaway