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Showing posts with label Jason Fox. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jason Fox. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Jason Fox

Jason Fox, The Upper Depths, at Peter Blum, in Soho - very first thing I noticed when I walked in was the Schulz biography... displayed with a mass market Philip Dick sci-fi novel, Balzac's Old Goriot, and a book on Josef Beuys.

The Dick novel is Radio Free Albemuth... one of Joe Bradley's paintings was titled Abelmuth. Jason Fox was one of the artists included in the Bradley-curated Peanut Gallery, maybe they are sharing books and ideas. I wonder if Bradley's misspelling is intentional or if that was just a typo.

Jason Fox
Jason Fox


Jason Fox

Can't find my list with all the titles and dates... I'll try to add them later. The work in the show is all dated 2006-2008.

Jason Fox
The blue is blue tape. 

Jason Fox

Jason Fox
I see a Redon head inside a giant spacesuit helmet.


Jason Fox at Peter Blum, Soho.

Monday, March 27, 2006

chelsea, march 2006, #2

Stephen Westfall
Stephen Westfall at Lennon Weinberg - I liked every single one, but none of them quite as much as Dogwood, the piece I saw here last summer. I think because Dogwood made me think of Japan.
Jason Fox
Jason Fox at Feature - Jason Fox kicks ass. This was so cool to see right after seeing the Stephen Westfall paintings next door. This painting is in the back and the guy let me look at it, and even pulled out a bigger older one that Fox had painted on the back of a Meyer Vaisman (they are former studio mates).

Everything at Feature was good - the current show in the front room is Lucky DeBellevue; James Wagner has a beautiful photograph here. The paintings are like something from Maurice Tuchman's The Spiritual in Art. Tyler Vlahovich is in the back room with interesting work.

Louise Fishman
Louise Fishman at Cheim & Read - I really liked seeing the little sailboat De Kooning homage in this painting. That's what it is, right? That's how I read it, anyways. Didn't like all of these paintings, some of them got to thick with brushstrokes and flattened themselves out or something. My favorite was in the back room, on the wall on the right. Can't find an image but it was called Ramon De La Vida Loca - it had a lot of variety of strokes and direction and action, and the space was the best. The lightest part was farthest away, the darkest parts closest; and the far away strokes were the sharpest, with the closest the blurriest. There was a big sweep coming down from the top, a little left of center. Like a gauzy curtain.

Lots of Louise Fishman talk on PaintersNYC and at Edna's.
Alison Fox
Alison Fox at Sikkema Jenkins - Another sailboat, maybe(?). Okay, I have now seen enough Alison Fox paintings to know that I generally like them, and in this show she and Paula Wilson were my two favorites, although I didn't like the Fox image that was chosen for PaintersNYC at all, too cake-y. I like her colors and designs, sense of structure, and the seemingly casual brushwork. Some of these paintings get very complicated but they don't become weighted down (except for that cakey one).

The Paula Wilson's were freaky. On some of them all of the crinkly paper add-ons kind of got in the way for me, but on this big butt face one it works well.

The Matt Connors and Mark Handelman were both just completely blah for me, and Chris Dorland's stuff I always find boring for some reason, but not necessarily badly painted. Not sure what it is... the monochrome, the stifling feeling, the sterile settings? Can't get into them or get anything out of them.

They talk about this whole show on Fairy Butler's blog, lots of different thoughts in the comments. Most of them didn't like Fox's paintings, and did like Connors'.

Monday, May 09, 2005

More 1993 II

Here's the second half of my look back at Jerry Saltz's A Year in the Life:Tropic of Painting - an overview of painting shown in NYC during the 1993/1994 season - originally published in the October 1994 issue of Art in America.

My first post is here, Saltz's full text can be found here.

Category VI. Weird Realism

"it appears as if numbers of people are about to abandon their allegiance to theory. You can almost smell it"

Toba Khedoori
Peter Doig - "his work lacks any sense of archness or strategy"
John Currin - "These were Currin's best paintings and his most peculiar to date. In his next show, I'd like to learn more of what these images mean to him"
Alexis Rockman
Peter Cain
Robin Lowe
Manuel Ocampo
Hugh Steers
Taboo - "something of a natural"
Maureen Gallace - "a sleeper"
Jim Hodges
April Gornik - her landscapes "have shown little sign of growth over the past decade, try to be visionary and descriptive at the same time, succeeding only occasionally"
Elizabeth Peyton
Billy Sullivan
Jane Kaplowitz

Jeremy Dickinson
Robert Yarber
Lois Dodd
Jane Wilson

Category VII. Conceptual Painting and Appropriation

"some people make paintings to make paintings, other people make paintings to make a point" - "If any of these artists ventures too far from the Path of Visual Thinking, their work can collapse into the ashes of irony"

Martin Kippenberger - "garishly colored and crudely painted", "more interested in chaos than either destruction or anything egalitarian. That's what lifts him above all the other pan-stylists"
Deborah Kass - "Her achievement lies in the way she freshens up another artist's style with new meaning"
Guillermo Kuitca
Nicholas Rule - "a disappointment", "I still believe in this guy, though"
Gary Simmons
Ida Applebroog
Annette Lemieux
Komar & Melamid
Dottie Attie
Byron Kim
Catherine Howe
Kay Rosen
Glen Ligon
Adam Rolston - "vapid"
Lawrence Gipe
Sarah Morris and here- "hopelessly caught in the spring of 1989. Their irony and archness is so empty and dogmatic that you can't help but think about all the other artists who have passed this way in the last five years"
Lutz Bacher

Category VIII. Abstract Painting:Underdog or Uber Alles?

"There are many ways you could divide the unusually crowded category of abstract painting: these are only four of them, and the second is the most problematic"

Sub-Section 1. Mutant Greenbergian Abstraction

Larry Poons - "reminds us that as it is with artists, so it is with art movements: Never Count Anything Out"
Fiona Rae
Elliott Puckette - "one of the sweetest yet most austere shows of last season. In her first solo appearance, Puckette streamlined Pollock's alloverness into calligraphic lines and arabesques incised into painted wood. Lyrical, erudite and brimming with restrained emotion, Puckette's paintings read like abstract love letters"
Julian Lethbridge
Sam Reveles
Karin Davie - "Davie's first show was sexy to look at even if it did fade quickly from memory after you left the gallery"
Ross Bleckner
Peter Schuyff
David Dupuis
Rachel Finn
Mary Jones
Craig Fisher
Andrew Masullo - "another sleeper"
Cora Cohen
Richard Kalina
Shirley Kaneda
Greg Kwiatek
Andrea Belag
Jacqueline Humphries
Gary Lang
Eva Lundsager - "who more people should look at"
Lawrence Carroll

Sub-Section 2. Abstractionism

"this may be the kind of work that is helping to give painting a bad name", "these artists make rules rather than break rules. It's amazing that something that started out as bold and open as abstract painting should in their hands end up so obvious and lifeless"

Juan Usle
John Zinsser
David Row
Cary Smith
Andrew Spence

Sub-Section 3. Garage Artists

"like Garage Bands, Garage Artists make their paintings with whatever's around: nails, string, chewing gum, Vaseline, yarn, rags or old underpants"

Joe Zucker
Matthew Weinstein
Fabian Marcaccio
Jim Isermann

Dona Nelson
Donald Baechler
Jody Lomberg
Charles Spurrier
Randy Wray
Jason Fox
Joe Leticia

Sub-Section 4. Mad Max Variations

Rudolf Stingel - "one of the more vexing artists around"
Christopher Wool
Dan Walsh
Edouard Prulhiere - "his exhibition went overlooked and under-talked-about"
Damien Hirst - "multicolored dot paintings, which have been seen at the Cohen Gallery, are as pretty as they are opaque, as dainty as they are deadpan and are purely "Mad Max"
Mike Scott - "needlessly complicated his once austere art"
Steve di Benedetto - "once seemed very promising, combined a murky painter-liness with hard-edged optical effects. Like Scott, di Benedetto tried to do too many contradictory things. Both lacked a sense of resolution or clarity"

This isn't the whole article. There are two more categories!! My eyes hurt, I'll maybe add more links later.