The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Artists and colleagues examine nature through a personal lens

- By Felicia Feaster For the AJC

A celebrated African-American artist, California-based Richard Mayhew, and one of Atlanta’s own, Freddie Styles, take on the subject of nature in a two-person show at Buckhead’s September Gray Fine Art Gallery, “The Nature of Art.”

A contempora­ry of the abstract expression­ists who made New York City in the 1950s the epicenter of contempora­ry art, Mayhew at 92 continues to display his heralded interest in the landscape as muse. Considered a master of the landscape form, his work on view in “The Nature of Art” illustrate­s a deep enchantmen­t with both the illusory potential of paint and a personal, explorator­y view of nature.

Nature of a highly impression­istic and creatively mediated sort defines both Mayhew’s and Styles’ work.

Conjuring up a cross between the French impression­ists and the more modern graphic sensibilit­y of an Alex Katz, Mayhew’s landscapes in oil on canvas depict a vaporous, chimerical nature more imagined than actual. Mayhew’s color palette, of bright, sugary fuchsias, salmons, rosy pinks and purple, imagines the world in subjective terms, whether the artist is surveying shorelines or hillsides or a grove of trees.

To achieve the unique gauzy, dappled look of his canvases, Mayhew pours paint directly onto his canvas and works the hues into the surface to create an effect that often resembles intense watercolor­s. Those rich, jewel-like swaths of color bleed into each other, creating hazy margins between land and sky, water and hillside.

Rather than a distant, appraising view, Mayhew’s is an immersive one: His fields of earth, sky and water fill the picture frame, seducing with the totality of nature. Like a portrait of one’s lover painted with all of the softfocus adoration you’d expect, Mayhew’s landscapes are beloved places, bathed in sentiment and enchantmen­t. In the gorgeous “Atascadero,” a line of trees is captured at twilight, bathed in indigo, looking like sentient creatures. Rather than caught between the artist’s crosshairs, nature lives and breathes in Mayhew’s pulsating colors.

If Mayhew is a romantic in his enraptured approach to nature, then Styles may be a pragmatist, taking a slightly more analytical approach. Styles often embraces the textures, systems and forms of nature through his oftrepeate­d focus on rows of trees or the orderly arrangemen­t of crops in the field. In works that incorporat­e paint, collage and mixed media on paper and canvas, Styles’ works often have the earthy texture of batik. His images summon up the micro details of the natural world, the striated bark, rough surfaces and marbled look of the sky.

Like nature viewed through a microscope, in “WR Stone Series #5” in acrylic on paper, Styles homes in on the mottled gray and white striations of stone seen in extreme detail. Styles’ work distills nature into a consistent, uniform phenomenon to be studied and measured from painting to painting.

Though their styles are distinct, Styles and Mayhew are united by their shared interest in an imagined, interprete­d landscape that is as much about the process of painting as it is about capturing reality.

 ??  ?? “AYA Series #3” collage on canvas by Freddie Styles is featured in “The Nature of Art” alongside work by Richard Mayhew.
“AYA Series #3” collage on canvas by Freddie Styles is featured in “The Nature of Art” alongside work by Richard Mayhew.
 ??  ?? “Diablo Pass” (2008) by artist Richard Mayhew.
“Diablo Pass” (2008) by artist Richard Mayhew.

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