Los Angeles Times

Great bits and pieces

- By David Pagel calendar@latimes.com

If you’re familiar with the paintings of Frederick Hammersley, you’ll be thrilled to see this beautifull­y installed survey at the Venice gallery L.A. Louver. And if you’re new to the art of Hammersley (1919-2009), then you’re in for an even bigger treat.

The installati­on of 98 works that Hammersley made from 1937 to 1991 provides an eyeopening introducti­on to the two bodies of work for which he is revered: his organic and geometric abstractio­ns.

Fantastic examples of each stop you and make you wonder how Hammersley could do so much with so little, transformi­ng snuggly abutted blobs and eccentrica­lly interlocke­d slabs of supersatur­ated color into odd compositio­ns abuzz with befuddling possibilit­ies.

Paintings such as “Family Tree” (1991), “Money From Home” (1986), “Altered Ego” (1971) and “Pre Prayed” (1981) make a virtue of illogic while making a case for humility, hard work and the secret pleasures of anonymity. Both meticulous and whimsical, Hammersley’s paintings push past convention­al thought patterns to get us to see the world differentl­y.

The show does something similar. Rather than zeroing in on Hammersley’s masterpiec­es, the exhibition features an abundance of what are usually thought of as minor works: sketches, studies, watercolor­s, collages, photograph­s and more.

In Hammersley’s hands, such exploratio­ns are anything but secondary. They go to the heart of what he does as an artist: to pinpoint, in seemingly incidental details, the silent beauty of the world. The work is magnificen­tly intimate.

In the first gallery, nine tiny lithograph­s — each measuring 3 inches square, each in its own handmade frame, and all from 1949 or 1950 — combine the dissonance of collage with the harmony of resolved compositio­ns. Hammersley marries disparate elements by finding confluence­s and building them into spunky patterns.

To make “Cut Up” (1964) and “Bernice” (1965) he sawed a modestly scaled painting into equally sized squares and then rearranged them into a new compositio­n. By collapsing two ways of organizing a painting onto a single surface, Hammersley opens up possibilit­ies not even he anticipate­d.

The freedom to go beneath superficia­l appearance­s and to find deeper structures and rhythms shape all of Hammersley’s works, which include 24 drawings made with a dotmatrix printer in 1969-70, a small number of lithograph­s from the 1980s, three black-andwhite photograph­s from the 1940s, three from the 1970s and all manner of sketchbook studies.

There’s more to everything than immediatel­y meets the eye. The works’ pleasures are all about how we see and know, not what we think we do.

L.A. Louver, 45 N. Venice Blvd., Los Angeles. Through June 24; closed Sundays and Mondays. (310) 822-4955, www.lalouver.com.

 ?? Images from L.A. Louver ?? “CUT UP” is among 98 Frederick Hammersley works that he made from 1937 to 1991 on display at the Venice gallery L.A. Louver.
Images from L.A. Louver “CUT UP” is among 98 Frederick Hammersley works that he made from 1937 to 1991 on display at the Venice gallery L.A. Louver.
 ??  ?? “MONEY FROM HOME,” created by Frederick Hammersley in ’86.
“MONEY FROM HOME,” created by Frederick Hammersley in ’86.
 ??  ?? “DARK AND LIKE” is among geometric abstractio­ns.
“DARK AND LIKE” is among geometric abstractio­ns.

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