Intensity in art1/27/2024 In this next example in the 21st century is a contemporary Ghanaian artist, El Anatsui, who in 2007 created this enormous wall-hanging tapestry from bits of plastic and wire.(see example) Almost all of the art works I have discussed are on view now at the Metropolitan Museum in NYC except the Klimt and my last example. Or, Bridget Riley who has pursued the brain’s conundrums with perceiving pattern densities as seductive teasers. ( see examples) There are other artists who were simultaneously pursuing texture and its ability to generate ambiguity in space as well as refer to marks on a flat field such as, the recently deceased Cy Twombly ( see example) Here are rows of automatic writing in layered linear perspective as if a landscape. I also give you a side view of the painting to reveal its relief surface. Here is Anselm Kiefer’s ” Bohemia Lives by the Sea”, a huge painting at least 8ft tall and 20 ft wide composed of oil, charcoal, and other elements. Toward the end of the century Anslem Kiefer and Gerhard Richter investigated the emotive effects of textured density, texture obfuscation through blurring and smearing, scale, the limits of textural variety and the limits of tactile relief effects. Others would follow ( Two new biographies of Joan Mitchell and Lee Krasner (author Gail Levin) have just been released and reviewed by Jed Perl in this week’s New York Times Book Review.) By the 1950’s abstract expressionists would pursue varieties of textural density through paint’s plasticity, thickness and its relationship to color. Lee Krasner’s more intimate and constructed intellectual versions of textural density would not resonate as well in this culture. (see example) Pollock’s oversize flare for the dramatic would find favor in a culture that valued large scale, large ambition and big emotional gestures. His preferences for exaggeration, large formats, and a flair for the dramatic ( culturally inherited from not only His Oklahoma roots where the bigger the ranch the better but also, from his Missouri muralist teacher, Thomas Hart Benton) made him make bigger and more chance driven fields of texture. I believe her work would influence the 1950 and later paintings of her husband, Jackson Pollock as he expanded the scale. By 1948 Lee Krasner, after exposure to Hans Hoffman’s push/pull theories of color, space, and abstracted shapes would invent a field of textural density to exceed Klimt’s, Klee’s and Vuillard’s work ( see example 3). Other French artists such as Edouard Vuilllard ( and other Nabis painters) would continue to pursue the notion of flat variegated patterns suggesting wallpaper, fabric, or gardens( see example 2). In the first and second decades of the 20th century Gustav Klimt toyed with flat patterns of complex and varied repetitive patterns, varieties within a coherent continuity(see example 1). The artist’s experiment at generating dense textures will be itself trigger the brain to try to read the painted texture of a chaotic field rendered within a rectangle as an enigmatic map of inscrutable variety. As Da Vinci observed, ” The pursuit of detail hinders the experience of detail.” Detailed texture is the result of successful experiments in generating fields of texture which trigger recognition. textures which happen to offer a correlation to the remembered texture. Making such a texture is not a function of detailed imitation but rather, the result of experiments with paint, ink etc. Imitating, mapping or symbolizing a remembered textured field is not necessary to trigger a response of recognition only making a texture which satisfactorily alludes to the texture of memory. If an artist can create an allusion to densely textured illusion then, our brain will correlate that painted textured flat field with a remembered (experienced) textured field such as a plot of turf, gravel, woven tapestry, the surface of a pond, or creased reflectant fabric. In painting there is the perception ( real or illusory) that textured density requires much labor and therefore, the greater the illusion of density the greater the perception of intensity and perceived value. Patterns of dense textural intensity seduce us.
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