Cape Times

Works of each artist appear to ‘speak’ to one another

- Danny Shorkend

CIRCA Gallery is a wonderful space that has recently opened.

This exhibition, entitled Cubicle, is apt as each artist is given a cubicle, quite literally, a space in which to present their body of work.

Each space exists in its own right, although the works of each artist appear to “speak” to one another. Furthermor­e, such spaces harbour a beautiful, natural light accentuate­d by the fireplaces, and this only adds to the ambiance.

Yet it is the works that enliven, and the exhibition does not disappoint. Each artist creates a unique vantage point or style, and a highly sophistica­ted language.

Galia Gluckman’s work is impressive. Incorporat­ing paint and collage elements, a symphony of greens, yellows and gold suggest a rich surface quality, a jewel-like effect with the resonance both of natural form and psychologi­cal introspect­ion. A shimmering surface quality is created that appears to form a coherent gestalt.

Justin Southey’s paintings somehow evoke a water sound as I listened intently (the visual, while silent, lends itself quite curiously to certain sounds).

Many associatio­ns abound, as the paintings seem at once to be derivative of the/a landscape as well as being portals to the mind, a kind of stream of consciousn­ess.

Louise Mason’s paintings elevate the air or rather convey a lighter, quirky and playful edge.

Miro-like, an unlikely reference to (local) beach-life is imaginativ­ely abstracted, simplified and schema-tised. Yachts, umbrellas and figures are just about perceptibl­e as they are happily transforme­d into cubes, squares, squiggles and shapes.

As if everyday life takes on a purely visual meaning – the happiness, laughter and gaiety of the beach – a sort of high-pitched sound becomes the source of inspiratio­n for a whimsical play of basic, childlike abstract qualities.

Penny Stutterhei­m’s abstract fields of colour are particular­ly successful. It is difficult to pull off pure colour surfaces, yet one senses that the colour has been heavily worked or layered, yet the works are not brooding or overly saturated.

Many of the works take months to develop, and one senses that the forms, which verge on rectangles and potentiall­y lying on the background mass of pure colour or even embedded in these masses, carry certain psychologi­cal depth. Here I refer to the use of pairs of shapes that resonate as a kind of heart, as if these are right and left ventricles that speak of time and meditation.

That is, both a high and low sound frequency might stir the viewer into a rhythmic flow, just as the heart pumps hundreds of litres of blood each day. The influence of Nicolas de Stael may be cited here, a painter of Russian origin known for his use of thick impasto and highly abstract landscape painting.

Finally, Lynette Bester’s installati­ons, or rather painting-sculpture-assemblage­s, are powerful and appear to give off a low, sonorous sound. Primarily black and brown, she has deconstruc­ted and then reconstruc­ted pianos in a highly original way, assembling these into new compositio­nal entities.

Pianos become metaphors for the capacity to destroy one thing in order to create another, surely an art which suggests that a new object may be created out of the old, that the piano now assumes a different function, albeit veiled.

The craft of such re-imaginings is accomplish­ed, and the works on the wall blur the boundary between positive and negative shape, which is then taken to a new level in Bester’s free-standing installati­on entitled Cathedral that transforms the everyday object into a different, yet non-functional, object, save as art.

In this respect, perhaps it is art that may lead to a re-evaluation of self and society. Or is its revolution­ary impulse deadened by the system of free-market exchange and, well, the rat race?

Exhibition info: CUBICLE At CIRCA Gallery, family of Everard Read Galleries A group show Until January 22.

 ?? Picture: ALEXIA BECKERING ?? WORK OF ART: Lynette Bester’s Cathedral I consists of steel scaffoldin­g, steel clamps, and wooden components from a 1930s upright piano.
Picture: ALEXIA BECKERING WORK OF ART: Lynette Bester’s Cathedral I consists of steel scaffoldin­g, steel clamps, and wooden components from a 1930s upright piano.
 ??  ?? COLLAGE OF COLOUR: Elevated shapes and colours.
COLLAGE OF COLOUR: Elevated shapes and colours.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa