10/30/2006

Larissa Bates

97 comments:

Painter said...

Larissa Bates @
Monya Rowe
526 w 26th st #605
new york, ny 10001

youth--less said...

well ok. I like it very much. Go womb-man.

Hurrah i awake from yesterday
alive but the war is here to stay
so my love catherina and me
decide to take our last walk
through the noise to the sea
not to die but to be re-born
away from a life so battered and torn....

kelli said...
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
heidi said...

I likey! Can't wait to see it in person. This is the best art so far on the October line up.

arebours said...

It's hard not to find these works appealing,tho some of the elements that make them appealing are the same things that wall them off from a deeper resonance

kelli said...

Have to agree this is the most interesting from the month. People were complaining in the Henning thread about just phoning it in. So there you go.

zipthwung said...

here

Theres something that reminds me of William T wiley, too.

operation enduring artist said...

did she have paintings of high school wrestlers in her last show?

MartyMart said...

Maxfield Parrish anyone????

zipthwung said...

Why arent these oil paintings?

Why are they on linen?

WHat is a drawing?

If I turn in a painting can it still count as a drawing? WHats the cut off?

I like oil paint, is why I ask.

zipthwung said...

Mafield parish and Ill raise you a japanese print.

zipthwung said...

And an Indian Miniature painting for your closet full of bounty towels. Or your sea sponge.

zipthwung said...

And a Chelsea rainbow for your pot of gold.

MartyMart said...

I'm seein it tomorrow....

by the way in the middle ages the word for brush was pencil, if that adds any spice to drawing painting discussion

zipthwung said...

baba yaga

ooga booga.

MartyMart said...

after reviewing the website a bit more, and seeing larger pictures, I think I will not be seeing this show. I just cant take the faux naieve genre any longer.... Please artworld move on. What makes something an illustration as opposed to not? Seriously?

heidi said...

well maybe it is an illustration, but it still works. I am of the school of thought that if something falls in that camp, does not make it instantly dismissible.....but that is a whole other topic.

youth--less said...

Is anyone going to t

youth--less said...

...alk about imagining the future... the female man thing? The continuing utopian imagination thingee?

MartyMart said...

how can you see all that from that teeny weeny jpeg?

kelli said...

You can kind of tell from the titles. Agreed she fits into the imagined utopia, Darger,shelter porn, teeny brush genres. Just think much better than the others.

Sven said...

this reminds me of progress real and imagined by Nicole Eisenman which I wasnt a fan of, plus some of the figures look like Rosa Loy which I was a fan of,..but falls short of either? this one doesnt do it for me , havent seen the show in person yet though.

heidi said...

Speaking of the themes, this is one of the only shows where the press release and the art seems to match up perfectly. Made me wonder if it is possible to be too aware of what one is going for, where you start capitolizing on it and becoming so clear that the term illustration could be used as a criticism in this case....
maybe it is not so good to be so hyper aware of what your work is about lest it gets pushed to that corner?

heidi said...

just thinking out loud, i'm mostly a fan though.

MartyMart said...

so then you all seem to be saying that illustration is tied to narrative. Where does that put surrealism? does that mean that non narrative ie matthew barney which upon first inspection has no cohesive narrative, is just a new form of narrative? Is that Meta narrative? No, that would be narrative inside narrative. So what would you call this disjointed narrative structure. is there a word that someone knows of? One that is in use?

no-where-man said...

Barneys film origins come from a history performance documentation and have grown increasingly mainstream narrative over the years.

MartyMart said...

can you give me an example of non narrrative illustration? Do you mean abstract?

arebours said...

whenyou have more than one person in the picture,seems like a narrative then-

arebours said...

yeah,a lot of works with figures are figure studies,I suppose-althuogh there is not too much of that right now,Pearlstein..is al I can think of

Unknown said...

Why does it matter anymore?

MartyMart said...

A narrative is some kind of retelling, often in words (though it is possible to mime a story), of something that happened (a story) ...

I liked that definition. I dont think for a minute that narrative = illustration, that would be silly, and I am not trying to get into semantics, but we are all talking around it not of it. I think figuration is an integral part, but figuration can be personification of inanimate objects as well. Barney being the example extension out of performance, that fits narrative. What is disjunctive postmodern storytelling, or surrealism? Amy Cutler. That is narrative right? Is it illustration? If so of what? what is the disjunctive story telling narrative of?

Maybe it has to do with literalness. I am just probing here to see what people have to say on the matter, not to try and nail it down.

If your narrative (painting) tells a specific story, or leads to a specific result/ending, then is it illustrative. Would an instructional narrative be considered illustrational? say a painting that told you how you should think politically, or intimated it, and was not openended in interprutation like say Blake, the path to knowledge is through excess.

If something arrives, is it illustrative?

Supportive of text or propogandistic literature?

It just goes to the whole problem of symbols, in that PoMo says symbols can mean anything.

I would say sure they can but they dont.

So perhaps narrative is not by definition illustrative yet illustration by definition is narrative?

anything?
anything?

MartyMart said...

As to why it matters anymore...

Pictures are used to influence the viewer, that is why it matters anymore. Pictures are encoded symbolic messages. So of course it matters.

no-where-man said...

how about photography

arebours said...

I would posit that a lot of artists don't even know what their narrative is ,if any,but want an excuse to paint pretty and cool things in pretty colors-to make a picture-and throw some oddball stuff in to add mystery

operation enduring artist said...

good observation exu--> oddball stuff=hipster.

bats:

"A narrative is some kind of retelling"

really? re-telling? what if this 'thing' hasnt or cant happen. a narrative work can depict something in a way that doesnt insinuate 'retelling'. sometimes it is just telling. also why has all of this narrative talk revolved around figurative work? often a relationship between marks or between two works hung side by side create a conversation, is this a narrative?

jeff said...

closeuup your quoting Jimi...
so down and down and down we go, hurry up and lets not be late for the show...

jeff said...

I'm sure your mom could deal with Birce's 4 luxurious homes and 7 figure income.

zipthwung said...

Bryce marden Daily schedule:

Wake and bake
say hi to wife
say hi to kids
play with dog
Have orange juice
Have coffee
Read paper
Mix luxurious brown
Smoke a bowl
GO for a walk
Paint for half an hour
Smoke a bowl
Look at painting (1-5 hours)
Smoke a bowl.

heidi said...

oddball=hipster means the same way a hipster may define who they are by an odd conglomeration of contrasting things and tastes, to differentiate themselves from the hipster next to them -- so do many contemporary artists by borrowing from a bunch of unrelated sources and combining them to equal new art that they reclaim as their own. In fact, the more far out the sources and relatively unclaimed, the better. Just like hipsters!

kelli said...

ouch. at least Moma didn't title the retrospective the Big Chill.

heidi said...

It's all recycled, only the personal choice of combinations can make the art somewhat unique nowadays and "standout" .

kelli said...

A lot of this genre reminds me of Piero DiCosimo (who I love) as much as Darger and I kind of think his paintings were an excuse for pretty colors and bits of oddball imagery. I'm not sure that's a new thing.

zipthwung said...

What is imagination anyways?

As you know I can wield any word as a perjorative, including "the" = as in "the... .. .

where was I?

I think sometimes people like to read, but others like to be read to.

With marden, he emptys his work so that egomaniacs (i.e. people with money) can fill them (i.e. with anecdotes - see six degrees of separation/kevin bacon, pop culture, and secrets!)

THis work doesnt look expensive does it? No.
Imaginative side scrolling stuff is for the lower eschelon with their x-boxes and their entertainment.

What is entertainment?

youth--less said...

its not marden's fault that his paintings cost lots. that's the fault of his dealer.

Unknown said...

I ment that "why does it matter anymore" comment generally, and not as a responce about the narrative. I feel quite estranged, and that was my question towards nothing. Everyone can talk as much as they want but it makes no diffrence. Mainly because when I look at many things, lets say 85% of the work I see, I ask why (which could be answered by a why not). It boils down to a person's connections and who they whore themselves out to, so is what we seeing even mattering? What we do see is a trickling urine flow blocked by the prostate of the bigwigs. Its always been like that and always will be.
I think I just confused myself more.

zipthwung said...

My current vote is for geographical cultural dominance. SOrt of Red state Green state kind of thing, to go with the urine metaphor.

Im also into political machines - Boss Tweed, Turkeys for the poor, that sort of thing.

Horatio Alger and Great Expectations is an intruiging narrative but I prefer Penny dreadfulls about marauding indians scalping settlers than young shoeshine boys making it with pluck and luck by pulling their own bootstraps out of the muck.

Oh and life of the mind. Cant misunerestimate that.
Thats the probelem and the solution, for me.

The donut and the hole.

heidi said...

cathy and zip, I lost you both there, urine? penny dreadfuls? could you expound more?
and yes chicomacho, we're all hipsters deep down, borrowing from everywhere. just avoid the skinny pants......

kelli said...

Chucky you're baaaaack! My comment was about Di Cosimo as well as Darger. I think it's OK for people to be critical. Maybe it might be more helpful to compare her to others in the category though?
Roberta Smith was off in comparing her to Echo Eggebrecht. Both good but Eggebrecht is dark Americana not Utopia.

heidi said...

Maybe I'm naive, but reading the illustration discussion it did not seem belittling to the artist, just seemed like a jump off point for a wider topic, people just hashing it out, that's all.

On another topic, do a lot of people posting here know eachother in non posting on the internet life? Just curious....

heidi said...

I meant know eachother in *real* life....urgh

heidi said...

Does anyone else see some Ernst? Those deep green eerie hues.....nice.

zipthwung said...

I am a robot.

Theres a clear line drawn in the sand (see the urine dealio) dont you fucking cross it.

Look at Rothko's early ashcan identified stuff and tell me how pure he is. WHen exactly did he add the flux and pour himself into the oblivion mold?

Marden is living with it, heroicly, sublimely, with his family and 300 of his closest vintages.

SOmetimes I feel like Im Chevy Chase on the way to Wally World except wall world doesnt have any rides I can afford. AND its closed.

Other times I wonder why this fantasy we call art has any traction at all.

zipthwung said...

I am a robot.

Theres a clear line drawn in the sand (see the urine dealio) dont you fucking cross it.

Look at Rothko's early ashcan identified stuff and tell me how pure he is. WHen exactly did he add the flux and pour himself into the oblivion mold?

Marden is living with it, heroicly, sublimely, with his family and 300 of his closest vintages.

SOmetimes I feel like Im Chevy Chase on the way to Wally World except wall world doesnt have any rides I can afford. AND its closed.

Other times I wonder why this fantasy we call art has any traction at all.

kelli said...

Heidi if we rule out illustration and pastiche there goes half of Western art history.In the old guild system apprentices inherited their teacher's drawings and often worked from them. Pretty or beautiful as a trivial or suspect trait ties into the Marden thread. (I don't know her. I've met Eggebrecht).

Unknown said...

I just mean its hard not to be bitter about all of this. Why should we whore ourselves out you know? I ment that around 85% of work I see in galleries and so on I dislike because they are not that great to me visually and conceptually. But maybe because I am bitter. Maybe through time it will change when I look back. Maybe I expect to much?
The flow of artists we "see" in the art system is so little for the obvious reasons. A big flow and prices go down. It bothers me that art is supposed to be seeing and because of economics and such we don't see what we could be seeing and what we could be seeing can be so much better than what we are "made" to only see.
I'm sorry

Unknown said...

That was all commonsense right?

George said...

Interesting question, (illustration?)

no-where-man said...

common sense? hum.. Are there not more Artists being shown right now then ever? is chelsea not the largest collection of gallerys ever together in history?

hum, but sampling, well that'z my jam and letmmme see here hipsters eh Andy, hum... check, MisShapes oh word, my roomies are regulars, oh yep most of those movies are on my shelf.. roots in beat culture - well if the disco ball fits.

Unknown said...

As I said, I'm just bitter and going off without ever of needing to.

kelli said...

I'm really happy to see more people in the system but wonder why it doesn't create more variety and more access for people who have traditionally been excluded.

Unknown said...

I think there is such a thing as art purgatory.

George said...

"I meant that around 85% of work I see in galleries and so on I dislike because they are not that great to me visually and conceptually."

nwm's point about the grand total of galleries is the case but the percentage of good shows seems to remain about the same regardless of how many galleries there seem to be. The work one might like is probably close to cathys15%, but just at some point in time for certain tastes and not others. In ten years, maybe sooner, fashions will change and young artists will have a different opinion of what to fill their hipster flask with. It was true in the past and it will be true in the future.

I would be cautious about equating "prices" with anything other than the pure mercantile aspects of the artworld. At the moment there seems to be a lot of money chasing art, this can change and fairly suddenly. For example, in the late 60’s a number of ‘Greenbergs painters’ fetched high auction prices, fashions changed and today they are out of favor and sell at 1/10th of the currently favored artists.

I would be cautious about equating "prices" with anything other than the pure mercantile aspects of the artworld

George said...

kelli,
"…but wonder why it doesn't create more variety and more access…"
The artworld seems to act like the other media models, look at the majority of movies which get made. Even if one has a great idea for a movie, it can be hard to get financing, everyone is playing it safe. The artworld seems to function more or less the same way.

Dumbpainter said...

Hmm. More ordinary architecturally benign fantastical landscape painting.

This trend seems far from over. I guess asking who paints the best clouds or best water becomes the real conversation...Waterworld vs. The Dark Crystal II.

Unknown said...

I suppose we just wait for the art market to crash.

Music, fashion and art have been following eachother quite closely.

70's and 80's throwbacks?

kelli said...

Is this artist really the best example though? I'm not that put off by the genre product placement or press release: within it she's doing something unusually beautiful and specific. It seems more on point for a LOT of the recent posts especially Henning.

PrettyPablum said...

Marden schedule LMAO.

Trolling this blog for some time- no one ever talks about art & economics glad to see. Taboo subject.

A few people in the market make most of the dough, while everyone else can sink or swim. What is creativity anymore, but either being skilled and relevant or finding a rich spouse? By learning to negate your marxist heart and latch on to the social order. That's how most older artists I know did it. Pretty damn creative. I think it takes a lot of personal dishonesty to achieve that. Seriously, it takes a lot of energy. I give them credit. They are more ambitious than lazy bastards like me. All I want to do is paint, I don't want no damn family.

Global warming will change everything.

George said...

"it will take quite a while for the market to crash as it is the wealthy who buy it;"

This isn’t quite the case, in an economic downturn the artmarket will be affected. What has occurred in the past is that the market for emerging and mid-career artists shrinks dramatically, the market for ‘blue-chip’ art sees softer prices but isn’t as affected.

no-where-man said...

well we will all find out soon enough with the upcoming auctions... the real question is what is going to happen with all the surplus when those gallerys flip into fashion boutiques and condos - air rights on the block anyone?...

and to me when my our lovely huge hipster w-burg loft is fliped...

GOD FORBID the market crash and put a damper on my 6-8 T-S cocktail promenade.

PrettyPablum said...

teenspeak for "funny"

George said...

e, Yes, the super rich could care less but in a downturn, gallery sales could contract by at least 50%

no-where-man said...

i view it as falling into the sex and alcohol.

- saatchi's upcoming sales - any thoughts? feelings? predictions?

kelli said...

have pets not kids
avoid drugs and alcohol or get to rehab
buy your primary residence
low overhead
every old artist I know followed all those rules.

kelli said...

Sex is fine but avoid sex with more successful artists.

kelli said...
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kelli said...
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kelli said...

Why did this pop up in this thread? I feel less cynical about her than many recent posts. Henning deserved it.

PrettyPablum said...

Yes, it all comes down to how to weather the storm.
Being really devoted helps, everything Kelli said follows suit.
Alot of artists have the 'all or nothing' ideology. When times get hard they aren't willing to scale down. Art is not a fantasy, it is a reality. Make it yours. Like arte povera they worked with what was around. Evoke the most amazing out of the most basic.

The problem with the market is that much of the nouveau riche are art dumb and ignorant. Not like there isn't wealth to go around. If you care about posterity and want to save the market, and therefore yourself, go be a teacher. Do your craft the ultimate service.

George said...

The question about what makes a painting look 'illustrational' is interesting (more interesting than the auction market). The earlier comment about emphasis on line (outline) makes a reasonable point but I wonder if it isn't more just a result of the intent of the painter.

I wouldn't characterize this painting of Bates as illustrational but I wonder if her color might make the painting seem like it leans that way a bit

PrettyPablum said...

Illustration = rendering.
The space in this work is really warped. I'm sure that's a byproduct of the collage-like construction of imagery.
The only thing that seems Japanese print-like to me is the graphic signifier for the vegetation and terrain. Plus the severe blue fade for sky.

There is wonderful atmosphere in this work but it seems like a trick- creamy yellow horizon with figure ground elements done in near-silhouette.

It seems all about detail. Which one can't get from a Jpeg.
Must see in person.

George said...

zip made the comment "… that as long as it is well painted. This is the essence of academicism." I agree, in the sense that academies, past and present, emphasize ‘technique’ (craft) as if it was a solution to making a great painting, it’s not. What makes a painting great is something beyond technique which I don’t think can be taught.

It seems when we use the word ‘illustration’ in a pejorative way we are sensing something about the painting which is not convincing. Sci Fi paintings can suffer from this. I’m wondering if what happens is that as a viewer we get locked into the painting as an image, ,it becomes a picture of itself rather than itself. I don’t think just outlining some stylistic characteristics leads to a definition, taste changes both in painting and illustration and the crossover point would be continually shifting. A painting could use an ‘illustrational’ look to convey a psychological or conceptual point.

George said...

off topic...
Mirror test implies elephants self-aware

kelli said...

I hand draw my underdrawing but it sucks because if everybody uses a projector how can people tell the difference? This artist really deserves some credit. The rocks and trees are clearly forms she struggled out and invented. It reminds me a little of Jay Davis but more of Piero DiCosimo and maybe Fra Fillipo Lippi's rocks. We're kind of joking about invented landscapes as this passing trend but it's a tradition. Maybe a better one than tracing paper.

George said...

I think the evidence of the struggle to make the image, whether it is in drawing it or getting the paint right, contains information that adds to the paintings prescence. I find the earlier DeKoonings more interesting for this reason. In a way, this touches on the illustration issue, something drawn contains something about the artist drawing it, it's like encoding a sequence of decisions subliminally into the painting.

Anonymous said...

Re: preliminary drawing/under drawing
I don't think it matters how you get an image up, as long as it does the job, and does it well.

Re: innovativeness
Personally I look for an eye that has the flexibility to reinvent the way we see. This way it's a sure thing that the artist is seeing very differently--and with that, I want to get in and see what they are seeing too!

Re: image
It's gooey but not gluey! It's tired! The world is full of these images, easily summoned by the imagination.
I don't think it useful to look this way, unless, of course, it earns you a living, and you can live with it.

heidi said...

Didja know-Jenny Saville traced, due to scale. But she did things like work with b+w photos so she would be inventing the color and form.
Probably is better if there was less tracing, more form invention. I like the crispness when I see traced forms but that could be the fashion of the day. Probably more paintings would like like Soutine than Katz if tracing was done away with.....?

Again-I like Bates work, just some food for thought.

heidi said...

Oh and I love Saville's work too, just added the tracing bit as information.

heidi said...

Brent-who have you seen that reinvents that you would cite as a prime example? I always like names....

MartyMart said...

Speaking of the tracing line here...
Picasso, (sorry to name drop) was constantly tracing and then editing to create (reinvent) the same image with slight additions or subtractions/corrections. The projector problem that people were speaking of is due to Parallax. that is what makes the images look wierd. Nothing wrong with tracing. what about degas? I like this line thread too, the line color problem and its emphasis that shifts from generation to generation. Thanks for the comments on illustration, I think it helped me understand how people classify such things when not using the term as a detractor.

no-where-man said...

this all about the line thing, i don't know if i buy it. seems like a kinda throw back mentality to not take an active intrest in the working of the market. that is of course if u need to put a roof over your head and food on the table. because it is not just "random" not "random" at all.

i remember in my final year of school drinking pretty heavy with a proff who let out "we don't approch the market in school because it is that grim"

arebours said...

Bitter no.Cynical,somewhat.Older,most likely

kelli said...
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zipthwung said...

Imagination Example:

so i was floating downstream on a raft made out of:

ham hocks
donuts
ships in bottles

On a river of:

Urine
dutch chocolate
vanitas
blood

being attacked by:

pygmies wearing vintage brands
man-bear-pig
leprechauns
Ed Meeses

weilding:
Rainbows
crossbows
wrist rockets
Reeces Pieces

Towards:
The edge of th known world
A blank obsidian wall
The edge of the canvas

+++++++++++++++++++++++++

Watch it brent or Ill do a piece on parallelograms.

Unknown said...

Someone should make an art ranting blog.

Anonymous said...

Ha, Team Truth I just wrote you a long-winded reply, and the magical thing is it just went up in a puff of smoke, disappeared.
I'm not going to start again, sorry.

Gist, I don't do names. Ask cooky! And as anyone who knows me--I'm a bit of a mono-filament, focus on what's there, I'll live with it.
I said something relative to this work, the rest I left open, as it's not a wresting match.
I will give a link to an earlier work, which I think is much better, signals are out--there is antenna.
You can argue the illustrative!

Also zip, I had a funny paragraph designed just for you, that too gone All left to say is 'rhombus to you too!';)

http://jameswagner.com/mt_archives/BatesLarissa.JPG

Sven said...

brent I'm coming by Tokyo soon. any good shows up?

Anonymous said...

... coming by, cooky, look me up?, we'll take in some shows, all-nite 'sing'?. I was talking to TAB honcho about your, generally, some people's comments that Tokyo is a dead zone for art, and he said the same thing as I said to you, it's not heated up Berlin, not nyny, but certainly is tokyo, a flavor, a smell that's invigorating all the same, even if we are living under auspice of a Mori world at the moment. We'll see!