5 October - 29 December 2012, Reception: Thursday, 4 October, 6-8pm
Anoka Faruqee's mastery of color, experimentation in pattern, and relentless study of the optic converge in an exhibition of extraordinary paintings rich with dichotomy.
One body of work, unlike anything she has exhibited before, riffs on the moire patterns that develop accidentally through digital processes. At first glance, they look digitally produced, but the viewer quickly becomes aware of a painstaking (and baffling) process and refined hand. Though referring to video display screens and unwanted digital detritus, their clearly purposeful creation reveals visual complexity, sophisticated color and rich physicality.
Other paintings in the exhibition expand Faruqee's continuing practice of painting hundreds of handmade modules in subtly shifting colors to create color gradients that simulate light, shadow or painterly bleeds. The asterisk-shaped modules she uses refer to early studies of geometry, the traditional Islamic (and Faruqee's contemporary) pursuit of a "content-less" motif, and the individual units that make up pixelation.
These large "freehand" paintings are improvisational and organic: Faruqee "grows" the painting, starting with a single, hand painted module on the edge or middle of the canvas. As she moves away from the beginning point, she uses the shape, scale and direction of every mark to guide each painting's own geometric teleology. Through this process she refers to the seeming chaos and corresponding mathematics found in nature.
Though both bodies of work make reference to the of-this-moment vocabularies of computer modeling, Faruqee's undulating spaces are not mapped mathematically, but are filtered through the physical nature of paint and the human act of painting.
Anoka Faruqee lives in New Haven, CT, where she is an Associate Professor at the Yale School of Art, and Acting Director of Graduate Studies of the Painting and Printmaking Department.
Official Website: http://www.hosfeltgallery.com
Added by FullCalendar on September 17, 2012