Los Angeles Times

Awash in mysteries of the deep blue

- By Leah Ollman Samuel Freeman, 2639 S. La Cienega Blvd., (310) 449-1479, through Feb. 16. Closed Sunday and Monday. www .samuelfree­man.com

Otherness and psychic disorienta­tion have long been fertile themes for Blue McRight, and never more so than in her newest body of work at Samuel Freeman.

Based in L.A., McRight spreads her energies across multiple media — painting, sculpture, installati­on and public art — and her work’s emotional spectrum stretches as well, from whimsical to tantalizin­gly dark. The darker, the more heft and mystery.

In her last show at Freeman in 2009, McRight let loose a f lock of black, bandage- and thread-wrapped bird figurines in a side gallery, infusing the space with a haunting, spectral presence.

She reprises the technique here, sheathing a few more animal forms (squirrels, rabbits and birds), but mostly wrapping twigs and segments of hoses (garden variety as well as a thinner sort used for scuba) in odd configurat­ions, incorporat­ing nozzles, sprinkler heads and other water-related hardware. Inspired by her experience­s scuba diving, McRight has conjured an alternate universe as fascinatin­g and mildly unnerving as the underwater deep.

A menagerie of nearly 50 forms is arrayed across several platforms of varied sizes and heights. There are also a few wall-mounted pieces, and a network of hoses (some unsheathed) joining some of the works together. The assembly is curious and captivatin­g. Some pieces look like obsolete medical devices and some like poor creatures in need of their interventi­on.

“Spurt” is among the best of these mutants, a small, lumpy body studded with nozzles and stumps, resting uneasily or perhaps attempting to rise. Appealingl­y abject, a weirdly charming amputee, “Spurt” is a poster child for the Freudian uncanny. Identity confusion and sexuality (the hoses evoke both tubes and phalluses) converge throughout the show, and the inanimate creeps convincing­ly into the realm of the animate, an anxiety-inducing trespass.

Suggestion­s of the body are everywhere. The rhythmic alignment of rubber tubing, rusty sprinkler mounts and shiny metal clasps becomes two wall-hugging spines. Hoses double as limbs, horns and of course, arteries and veins. The conveyance of vital fluids is also evoked in pieces where sheathed twigs mimic downward-thrusting roots.

Leavening the whole are visual puns and funny, an- thropomorp­hic cracks. One of the long, conduit hoses splits at one point, connects to two jittery-looking wrapped twigs then resumes its smooth trail, as if the charge running through that line were momentaril­y electrifie­d.

Water is the unifying theme in a set of small paintings on paper. The images — of a woman f loating, falling, spraying water, a filled bathtub hovering in the sky, a trailer parked on a tiny island — feel lifted from a dream journal. They are more compelling as a group than singly, but the naturalist­ic rendering and super-vibrant colors detract from the stark potency of whitewalle­d galleries filled with predominan­tly abstract, black sculptures.

McRight’s work here bears some familial relationsh­ip to that of Lynn Aldrich, Phyllis Green and others exploring the continuum connecting the real and surreal. These curious objects resonate like fetishes, of this world and yet otherworld­ly.

 ?? Samuel Freeman ?? INSPIRED BY her scuba diving adventures, Blue McRight’s new work features varied tubing that conjures an alternate universe.
Samuel Freeman INSPIRED BY her scuba diving adventures, Blue McRight’s new work features varied tubing that conjures an alternate universe.

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