 ...
The
Older Generation
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XXXXXFigures
from the older generation of the Modernist Mainstream continue
to expand my mind. Beginning in the 90's, Larry Poons
evolved a startling, wild new style which yielded
some of his most original and extraordinary paintings ever.
The color was still Color Field, tending always toward
pastels, but
his dense,
dry, coarse, cacophonic intensity proved difficult
to see for eyes schooled by Olitski. But to me, Poons's
most recent works are disappointingly conventional. Perhaps
they will be transitional to something more exciting. After
40 years of international super stardom and multitudes
of
loveless
paintings, Frank Stella has been miraculously reborn as
our freest and most exciting sculptor. Richard Serra’s
last two awe-inspiring shows at Gogosian Gallery were also
the pinnacle of his development so far. Like Stella, he
has used fashionable success to elevate his art to the
highest level. Both are in their 60’s. One of Modernism
greatest masters, Olitski, now over 80 and facing cancer,
has created a gloriously joyous, celebratory new series
of paintings. Anthony Caro’s recent
show at Michell Inness and Nash gallery, entitled The Barbarians,
was wonderfully original. He is 80, and continues to challenge
himself and expand our mind. This is less true of Noland,
although he remains a great colorist
and powerful picture maker. Robert Goodnough , also knows
how to keep his art alive. As far as I can see, the 82-year-old
Belgian, Bram Bogart, one of the few Europeans
to be influenced by Color Field, remains the most commanding
Modernist painter in Europe. He has taken painting as physical
presence to its ultimate extreme. Although Frankenthaler’s
recent show at Knoedler’s looked weak and tired,
she, like the other major Color Field painters (including
Louis, Dzubas, and Bush until they died) have been amazingly
creative and consistent over the past 50 years. Their work
is one of the great achievements of Modernist Art.
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Frank
Stella, "The Monk and the Condemned Man" ,1998,
44"x 59" x 36"
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XXXXI
am going to elaborate on all of the above in subsequent writings.
Also, there are many other outstanding figures, Mainstream
and not Mainstream, well-known, little known, and unknown,
who I will be discussing too. But always looming in the background
will be the seemingly anachronistic figure of Odd Nerdrum,
Norway’s contemporary Old Master, and self-revealer
extrordinaire. Some call him the world’s greatest living
painter. For me, his 1988 show at the Edward Thorpe Gallery
was a historical event. It consisted of monumental figure
paintings in the 17th century style invented by Caravaggio,
and it was simply spectacular. Not since Gericault, not for
well over 150 years, has a major figure worked in this style.
Here is “history painting” in the grand, humanistic
tradition: heroic moral action, and dramatic chiaroscuro.
Nerdrum reminds us why history painting was traditionally
regarded as the most challenging of all subjects. Also his
accomplishment puts to rest the notion that to be major a
painter must be Modernist. Stylistically, Nerdrum’s
painting is the polar opposite of Modernist painting. He
achieves relevance through his literary subject matter, which
consists of stripping man of contemporary, urban, civilization
and reducing him to his existential, universal, human condition.
If Nerdrum is achetypically Post Modernist, by now he can
also be said to be Modernist, taken as the quest for untrammeled
freedom. Modernism is an infinite expansion of the possible
driven by the passion to enshrine the feeling of freedom.
Nerdrum and the New New both make the same point: anything
goes, and genius alone, “gives the rule to art.”
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Odd
Nerdrum, "Man
Bitten By A Snake", 1992, Fry
Museum, Seattle
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http://www.christinatracy.com
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