Los Angeles Times

A vast landscape brightly unfolds

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Light is both a particle and a wave in 24 small, abstract paintings by Brooklyn artist Emily Davis Adams. Wholly non-figurative images turn out to be representa­tional, yet classical distinctio­ns between those two terms readily dissolve into emanations of colored light.

Their intimacy demands close perusal. The largest painting in Adams’ lovely second show at CB1 Gallery is just 24 by 20 inches, while many are in the vicinity of 9 by 12.

In each, two or three stacked rectangles of color appear to subtly bend, ripple and bow. Frequent allusions to landscape — to immeasurab­le skies spreading out over Great Plains or vast oceans — press against the pictures’ diminutive size. Light shimmies up between color bands, while shadows reveal a dimple, an unexpected curvature or soft creases.

Adams begins these small oil paintings by constructi­ng a little theatrical stage set from colorful constructi­on paper. Like sculptor Thomas Demand, whose mural-scale photograph­s show rooms and other places that he has reconstruc­ted from paper and cardboard, she makes paintings that embrace a fabricated reality.

In one, the center of a brownish-white rectangle is textured with scores of tiny, feathery brush marks. The result is like moon glow on a rippling pond. Imaginatio­n is more important than knowledge, as Albert Einstein taught us, and slow looking is a condition for really seeing the visual and material conundrums that Adams paints.

CB1 Gallery, 1923 S. Santa Fe Ave., Los Angeles. Through Feb. 19; closed Mondays and Tuesdays. (213) 806-7889, www.cb1 gallery.com

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