5/18/2006

Jennifer Coates

27 comments:

Painter said...

Jennifer Coates @
Feigen Contemporary
535 West 20th Street
New York, NY 10011

Sven said...

Its a weak statement to make, but a lot of the work posted recently seems to be 2nd tier, which is completely elitist to say.....
Still, why not post the Ruyter show or the Henneken at Andrew kreps. Not to say that those shows are that good, but I'm sure they would spark more interesting conversations than some of the more conservative works posted here lately.
blah blah blah

amy boras said...

This doesn't do anything for me. What is the deal with the bubbles coming out of the trees? They simply look like an add-on to make the piece "different". I would love to know the reasoning behind them.

no-where-man said...

it is like someone superimposed the 2 paintings below. - the look of the times.

rainbowandskull said...

There is a really creepy one called creeper in the show. I find these really unsettling. They are the moment in a scary movie that goes on to long before the violence starts.

pinkandlacepony said...

Seems to be made by a thoughtful artist. Very sincere.

Fiona Ross said...

I love Coates's paintings - they are
sublime. I see striving and gasping and grappling in these works. They leave me breathless.

PD said...

I think these paintings are incredibly beautiful. They are very personal statements about place and a heightened psychological state. Actually, what I just said does not do them justice. They are deftly painted, expressive and intelligent--three things I think are so often lacking in the work that is out there right now. These DO NOT look like grad school work at all. They are simply dazzling and acomplished paintings that I love spending time with and thinking about.

amy boras said...

On the grad school topic - Can anyone here recommend a grad school program in NYC that is worth looking into?

Martin said...

this is one of the shows i am excited to come up and see. below are some links to details of the paintings, on barry hoggard's flickr site.

http://flickr.com/photos/bloggy/144831342/in/photostream/
http://flickr.com/photos/bloggy/144831745/in/photostream/
http://flickr.com/photos/bloggy/144832485/in/photostream/
http://flickr.com/photos/bloggy/144832921/in/photostream/

dubz said...

yeah, this is a really good show. the paintings are a slow burn... you think you know the subject matter but it keeps morphing and shifting between real and fantasy... they're not static images at all. the scale is really nice, too. there are two small ones that really kick.

zipthwung said...

This painting reminded me of a show at Andrea Rosen - EXPLORING LANDSCAPE: EIGHT VIEWS FROM BRITAIN

Probably because of the orange and it's compliment, blue. I love that combo. Was real popular in my undergrad. I couldn't get enough of it. Kind of a fifties STYLE thing, too.

Grad school - If you are looking for a good school, why not try somewhere abroad? At least you will get to travel.

Choose the school based on the INDIVIDUAL(S) you wish to study under. FOr example, hard edged abstractionists or academic funk art, or the theory heads/art historians that are there, if thats your thing.

Do your homework - like right now, what are you interested in learning?

Who do you want to be today? Who do you want to be? Boing.

You could take a class from Donald Kuspit or something.

There are some good curators (the people you want to meet and greet within ten feet) that are under the radar - look for artists you like and look to see who is putting those artists in shows.

zipthwung said...

I like this bookcover illustration

triple diesel said...

It's like "Railroad Sunset" by Hopper* except with some Burchfield mysticism, except more eerie and spooked than radiant.

*http://home.earthlink.net/~anewcombe/Hopper/railroad_sunset.jpg

amy boras said...

zipthwung - i appreciate your grad school reply. part of me just feels like grad school is a game even though i want to pursue it. i think it's hard to figure out who's the right person out there.
and the right program.

albinoradio1 - i'm always up for a good formal art conversation.

amy boras said...

zipthwung - i appreciate your grad school reply. part of me just feels like grad school is a game even though i want to pursue it. i think it's hard to figure out who's the right person out there.
and the right program.

albinoradio1 - i'm always up for a good formal art conversation.

Pretty Lady said...

I can't wait to see this show! From the look of the JPEGs here and on Edward Winkleman's site, plus most of the comments here, I think these are some of the paintings I've been looking for. Metaphysical, direct (as opposed to the endless ironic quotation that is so much of modern painting), deep, complex without being busy, and just plain beautiful. An enormous inspiration.

carol es said...

interesting comments. ...i was just going to write "nice painting" but i guess that's just soooo 2nd tier, lowbrow and uneducated to say. some of you people are just so esoteric about art. get a life.

bsch said...

Other pieces from this show seem richer and less limited by specific associations with representation. "Grotto" and "Softwall" were particularly suggestive and still ambigous. They paint handling seems (on the screen) subtle and deft. The compositions are dramatic, desceptively simple. My only misgiving is that they suggest Star Trek scenes in some way that I find disturbing.

zipthwung said...

One point made about the stones continuing into the sky - is that this creates two different perspectives - the side on and the top down, in my mind. A common "trick" although "sophisticated" and maybe thats not it at all, although it works for me, here.

If that's not clear, look at the www.psyop.tv Bombay Saphire(TM) gin commercial, which resembles an animated oriental scroll, and frequently makes this spatial shift. The cheesey guitar is nice, too - Eliot smith esque.

If you like that sort of surreal spatial shift thing.
I've been there done that.
If its new to you dont let my jaded ennui disourage you from doing it, too. Maybe you could make some money or something.

zipthwung said...

here

Professor Mouth said...

Carol Es, if you find these people 'esoteric', then you might want to get a high school education. Here's my copy of 'Huckleberry Finn'. Enjoy, and feel free to email me when you run across an 'esoteric' word.

I like Coates... when I see the jpegs of details from the paintings. The whole paintings are just more overworked 'Yes' covers for the twenty-first century. But Chelsea seems to have an unquenchable appetite for that stuff, so... good for her?

Scrolling down this month's worth of PNYC blog... I have to wonder. Is painting really this lame, or Does Painter simply have really, really bad taste in painters? I mean jeez... I saw more variety at the Columbia MFA show... barely.

Whatever the reason, I'll bet the next entry is a highly pictorial, possibly glaze-happy maximalist. Possibly featuring some sort of grotesque humanoid. Fifty bucks.

pinkandlacepony said...

PM I think it is the galleries that have bad taste. How could all of these paintings be one persons taste? Get real. Painter post a different painter almost everyday.
It looks like you owe Painter $50.00

fairy butler said...

go and see the show in chelsea - take some time and let the paintings unfold. sweeping moments vs sparkly intricacy. these are evocative paintings in every sense - fun to move around in and full of heart while still weird and unsettling at times. i recommend.

youth--less said...

Did someone stuff the ballot box or what? Do you think no one will notice?

zipthwung said...

FRAUDS! Im loading my straw with cheeto flavored archival cotton rag spitwads.

Stelios Argiros said...

Jennifer Coates definitely has talent. The variation in sizes threw me off though. The obsessive geometric triangles were a wonder to look at. I'll wait til her next show cause anyone with that kind of patience with a painting is at least trying. I'm just not a huge fan of abstraction unless it really sticks out the way Julie Mehretu and Mark Grotjahn's work do.