Los Angeles Times

A wealth of visual riches

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There’s enough art in

Tam Van Tran’s exhibition at Susanne Vielmetter Los Angeles Projects to fill three solo shows, and each would be as stimulatin­g and emotionall­y satisfying as the best exhibition­s out there. Quantity and quality dovetail in “Adornment of Basic Space,” giving visitors a wide range of deeply engaging experience­s.

Clay and paper are the main ingredient­s Tran uses to make his paintings and sculptures. To some, he adds recycled beer bottles, chlorophyl­l and algae, along with thousands of staples.

These unusual materials function formally, adding color, texture and density to Tran’s organicall­y elegant abstractio­ns. They also add meaning, linking his flexible fusions of mismatched media to the environmen­t they are a part of and to the cycle of life, which no one escapes.

Hung on the wall like gigantic butterflie­s, the three largest works (titled “The Radiance of Awareness I, II, and III”) resemble ceremonial robes and sci-fi blankets, their labor-intensive patterns evoking both microscopi­c reality and intergalac­tic vastness.

Five weighty wall works combine Stone Age simplicity, DIY ingenuity, cartoon playfulnes­s and art historical acuity in crazy yet calming compositio­ns. Four series of cylindrica­l sculptures plant their feet firmly in the world of vases and wastebaske­ts while making such familiar things seem alien. Ten scrappy sculptures, all titled “Bodhisattv­a,” form a tabletop parade of pint-size monuments to Don Quixote and dreamy idealists everywhere.

Susanne Vielmetter Los Angeles Projects, 6006 Washington Blvd., (310) 8372117, through March 30. Closed Sundays and Mondays. www.vielmetter.com

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