NEW YORK, NY.- The FLAG Art Foundation presents Surface Tension from September 17 December 12, 2015, on FLAGs 9th floor gallery. Surface Tension focuses on a selection of contemporary artists whose approach to abstraction incorporates a range of materials, processes, and techniques, such as sanding, stitching, dying, and layering, to draw attention to the dynamic potential of a paintings surface.
Sam Gilliam, associated with the influential Washington Color School of the 1950s and 1960s, contorts, folds, drapes, and dyes raw canvas to profound effect. Gilliams Out, 1969, showcases the 82 year old artists early experiments with poured paint on unprimed canvases, resulting in a vibrant composition of saturated colors. This particular work is beveled at the edges, an effort on Gilliams part to make the painting appear more object-like.1 The materiality of canvas plays a central role in Sarah Crowners Untitled (Leaves), 2015, a diptych of sewn, painted panels that plays with repetition of color and form. Created for the exhibition, Rebecca Wards patchwork painting XXXX, 2015, made of cotton batting and sheep-skin, results in textured and tactile surface that shifts the rigidity of a systematic abstract work. El Anatsui combines the visual language of painting and sculpture in his draped wallwork Telesma, 2014, which intricately weaves together found objects from across West Africa discarded liquor bottle caps, wrappers, bits of metal and wood to reflect his interest in consumption and reuse, and address the regions colonial legacy.
Surface Tension also highlights artists who explore the materiality of paint on canvas, transforming a means of representation into a vehicle for building texture and depth. Kadar Brocks deredemirtdxi(tolb), 2015, was constructed, or more accurately worn down, through a labor-intensive (and often repeated) process of underpainting, priming, and power-sanding, producing a work whose tattered and marbled composition serves as evidence to its making. Ryan Sullivans monumental drip painting March 8, 2014-April 15, 2014, 2014, builds layer upon layer of paints (oil, enamel, lacquer, latex and synthetic polymer paint) to create a three-dimensional relief surface. In a similar vein, Garth Weisers FYI, I am not the DJ Story from Poland or Venezuela. I am the DJ Story who was born in Jamaica and is currently holding it down in Asheville, NC, 2013, employs what the artist refers to as interference patterns, which generate distinctive textures, dimensionality, and implied space. Mark Bradfords large-scale canvas The Rabbit Didn't Dare, 2013, combines painting and collage to form grid-patterned abstractions, recalling the artists history of mapping the psychogeography of the city he calls home [Los Angeles].2 Inspired by Los Angeles gang culture and the use graffiti as a means of tagging territories, Sterling Rubys markmaking presents a timely alternative to classic painterly techniques. Rubys atmospheric spray painting SP301, 2014, organizes the canvas in bands of pink, acidic green, and black, varying in shading and intensity as a product of using readily available aerosol paints. Sean Scullys Landline Deep Blue Sea, 2015, furthers the artists investigation of gestural abstraction, and is composed of overlapping blue stripes that are rendered to emphasize sinuous brushstrokes and impart tactile order to the canvas. Lesley Vances Untitled, 2015, investigates spatial ambiguity through wide, suspended brushstrokes in contrasting shades of violet and yellow. As Vance states the composition [painted from a still life] begins to evolve and I am no longer looking at the source material. From there the surface becomes a malleable space as the objects dissolve into pure form
3 Similar to Vance, the source material in Cecily Browns work becomes obscured and abstracted in the process of painting. Browns Is it nice in your snowstorm?, 2014, is part of the artists recent series of intimately-scaled paintings, wherein rich staccato brushwork creates movement and depth, hinting at landscape.
Ultimately, the surface of a painting is a site for experimentation. The artists included in Surface Tension push the boundaries and possibilities of their primary materials, creating works that allow for chance and offer new formal strategies. As Ryan Sullivan states "It's not so theoretical. It's not preordained. I want to take a lot of time to let stuff happen, basically. The whole point of having these layers is to create this object that has a physical potential of its own...
1 Oral history interview with Sam Gilliam, 1989 Nov. 4-11. The Smithsonian Archive of American Art, Washington, D.C.:
but there was a way of making these work in a synthesis that was a part of other things like the thick stretcher that is on the side, the beveled thick stretcher that made the painting an object at the same time and also made it more so of a volume.
2 Essay accompanying Mark Bradford: Scorched Earth, on view at the Hammer Museum, Los Angeles, CA, from June 20 September 27, 2015
3Fried, Laura, Brand New: Lesley Vance, Flash Art, May-June 2010
4 Bollen, Christopher, The New Abstract: Ryan Sullivan, Interview Magazine, December/January 2014