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XXXXXWhen
I first met Jerald Webster, in the late 70’s, he
was already painting beautiful pictures. After studying
at Syracuse University, with Darryl Hughto, his painting
was informed by the paintings of Jules Olitski and Larry
Poons, “close valued or grayed and browned”,
as he describes them. Then, within a two-year period, he
saw retrospectives of Kenneth Noland, Hans Hofmann, an
exhibition of Matisse’s cut outs and a Jack Bush
painting, “Salmon Control”. These experiences
changed his painting radically. He rejected the second
tier Olitski-influenced painting, dominant in the 70’s,
and went back to the preceding “classical”,
Color Field painting – the hard edge, stain picture,
which dominated advanced painting between 1951-1965. Almost
immediately, Webster became a powerful painter demonstrating
a unique gift for color.
..........Completely unforgiving, staining is “one
shot” painting which forces spontaneous color improvisation.
In each picture, the color must seem fresh, alive, and with its
own chromatic logic and form of life. Color here is used solely
to express the self without any holding back, forced gestures,
or equivocations. Staining features color as never before, and
add to this, the acrylic medium, which makes staining technically
sound, offers a whole new range of brighter, clearer colors than
were ever available before. Staining shows the canvas weave throughout
and it is this warm, literal, flatness which gives the color
forms their illusive, disembodied, ideal feeling. The picture
is a lofty, glowing presence, which breathes and radiates light
filled color into the room. Staining tends toward pure color,
side-by-side color, which make for sharp edges
and often leads to geometry. Webster worked primarily with stripes.
He made many of these striped, stained pictures and many are
brilliant. Aside from the fact he rarely achieved heroic scale,
Webster’s stain pictures can hang with the best.
..........But since the 1980’s, an ambitious new
wave, the New New painters, have reacted against Color Field
and what had, to them, become its limitations. True expression
tends toward refinement and requires a periodic influx of the
ugly, of raw reality, if it is to remain authentic and “keep
it real”. The New New projects drawing, the sculptural,
the visceral, the baroque and the expressionistic. Less sublimated,
the picture becomes both more personal and, at the same time,
aggressively physical. It becomes an ecstatic affirmation of
the material world. Spirit no longer breathes free from literal
matter but wholly embodies it.
..........With these changes there has been a liberation
of drawing and the physical, without a loss of living color.
A new more flexible medium and a full range of stylistic possibilities.
A golden age for acrylics.
..........But Webster was slow to change and who can blame
him for his love affaire with pure color? But gradually his love
of freedom won out, and he too became a searcher. This was the
mid 1980’s. Along the way, and at every stage, there have
been wonderful paintings but only in recent years has Webster
evinced the same mastery, i.e. freedom, in his drawing and surface,
as he had previously in his color. A painter of genius almost
from the first, Webster is now a much larger, freer artist. His
best pictures stand toe to toe with the best paintings of our
time.
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