Martin Weinstein and Bobbie Moline-Kramer at the Castello 925 Galleries

by Jen Dragon

The Venice Biennale inspires the entire city to host innumerable exhibitions and pop-up art shows from almost every nation in the world. Every street, calle and piazza hosts gallery exhibits of paintings, sculpture, drawing, prints, digital, film, as well as performance art, music and theater. Campo di San’Isepo, located in Castello near the Biennale Gardens, is no exception. Castello 925, with two locations on Fondamenta San Giuseppe, presents two American artists: a solo exhibition of paintings by Martin Weinstein at the 780 Fondamenta San Giuseppe annex gallery and artwork by Bobbie Moline-Kramer as part of a two person exhibit up the street at number 925.

Martin Weinstein Vedute Palinsesti Installation view (left to right)- Venice, Santa Maria, 2 Evenings and Venice, 2 Afternoons at Castello 925 Annex Gallery located at Fondamenta San Giuseppe 780, Sestiere Castello, Venice VE thru July 10, 2022
Martin Weinstein Vedute Palinsesti Installation view (left to right)- Venice, Santa Maria, 2 Evenings and Venice, 2 Afternoons at Castello 925 Annex Gallery located at Fondamenta San Giuseppe 780, Sestiere Castello, Venice VE though July 10, 2022

Martin Weinstein: Vedute Palinsesti

The title of Martin Weinstein’s exhibition, Vedute Palinsesti, refers to the remaining traces after earlier marks are effaced to make room for newer writing in medieval manuscripts. Like the concept of the palimpsest, (Palinsesto in Italian), Weinstein’s paintings are layers of different points in time, with memories of former experiences overlain by more recent visual experiences expressed by luminous, gestural and deft brushwork. 

By painting on layers of translucent acrylic sheets and allowing these layers to re-combine and glow through one another, Martin Weinstein presents different stages of seeing. At first glance, these artworks seem rooted in the landscape tradition however the paintings present perceptions that together become an individual record of space and being. In Vedute Palinsesti, the combined images are painted in multiple sessions of direct observation from Weinstein’s rented studio in the Castello sector of Venice. Painted at different times, different days – and sometimes even years apart – the artworks are always from the same point of view.  The final layer, placed in the furthest back, is an abstract panel that supports the realistic layers above signifying the ultimate unknowability of reality that underpins all perception. These multiple sheets of acrylic record a period of time, experience and memory and acknowledge that all these perceptions are illusory. Richard Vine observes about Weinstein’s unique painting style: “Although the results are deceptively traditional-looking landscapes, the process and the pictorial technique are quietly radical.” 

Venice, 2 Afternoons © Martin Weinstein 2021 11 x 13.5 x 2.5 inches
Venice, 2 Afternoons © Martin Weinstein 2021 11 x 13.5 x 2.5 inches

The 11 paintings in this installation follow the times of the day starting with the soft pink glow of morning light, traveling to the brilliant clarity of mid-day and slowly transforming to the dark shadows of evening punctuated by the sharp, staccato specks of reflected light. Because of the perennially shifting layers within each painting, the artworks belie their small scale, each one measuring not more than 11” x 16.5” x 2.5”  and therefore appear much larger and nuanced. The visual cacophony of diverse watercrafts plying the mouth of the Grand Canal simmers down to a memory in the tiny dancing lights of the night views. No matter the time of day, the heavens never lose their drama as clouds roil across the landscape and absorb bristling towers as well as the soft, rounded domes of Venice. Sometimes, the painted waters part briefly to reveal a second church floating in their waves, other times, it is a tower valiantly pressing against the storm clouds that finds its echo in the depths of the evening sky. 

Venice, 2 Sunsets © Martin Weinstein 2013, 11” x 16.5” x 2.5 inches
Venice, 2 Sunsets © Martin Weinstein 2013, 11” x 16.5” x 2.5 inches

Although Martin Weinstein’s paintings are specific to Venice, the artist uses these historic and contemporary manifestations of this famous city as a catalyst for examining and isolating the layered process of painting.  Rather than hide each painted level surface permanently below the previous layer, leaving the finished layer to sum up and seal the process, Martin Weinstein instead isolates each level of painting, allowing the viewers’ mind to recombine them and amplify the optical illusion of vision.  It is through this spatial illusion that Weinstein reveals his true subject matter – not gorgeous architecture of a beloved city nor the small human activity that scurries about but the slowly enveloping experience of time. 

Martin Weinstein’s virtual catalogue for Vedute Palinsesti can be viewed here.
Martin Weinstein Vedute Palinsesti is on view at Castello 925, Fondamenta San Giuseppe 780, Sestiere Castello, Venice Italy through July 10, 2022

Bobbie Moline-Kramer: Power of One

Bobbie Moline-Kramer Power of One: (left) Religion, INRI, Crown of Thorns and (right) Dame Jane Goodall, 4-3-1939, oil and acrylic paint on wood panel, 12” x 12” each
Bobbie Moline-Kramer Power of One: (left) Religion, INRI, Crown of Thorns and (right) Dame Jane Goodall, 4-3-1939, oil and acrylic paint on wood panel, 12” x 12” each

In the larger Castello 925 Gallery down the street, Bobbie Moline-Kramer exhibits together with painter Antonio Pauciulo. California-based artist Bobbie Moline-Kramer’s exhibition The Power of One is an installation that examines time, space and destiny using the study of constellations as a touchstone.  Employing 16th-century glazing and gilding techniques, Moline-Kramer incises unique sky charts particular to each heroic figure with the same precision that antique celestial maps were prepared and painted by Italian and Dutch Renaissance masters.  Each painting is a portrait of individuals selected by the artist for their courage to make a difference in the world.  The astrological profiles of these various individuals are intertwined with the position of the stars at the time they were born or died (or in the case of a portrait of Italo Calvino, both birth and death are linked together. Another Moline-Kramer painting series depicts a family tree of birds representing the artist’s own ancestry and embedded history. However, Moline-Kramer does not just linger in the past but creates an adjacent installation that employs cutting edge technology to deconstruct her paintings into 3-D computer printed layers. Each layer of this installation is suspended from the ceiling and appears as ephemeral, variously hued flakes of sky floating down to earth. This paradoxical synergy combines facts with mysticism, mythology with mathematics, and traditional Renaissance technique with 21st century computer printing technology renders this exhibition not only about time and space but most importantly, about being. In the artist’s own words: “The concept of this body of work is twofold: the wonder of our world, and the power of one person to change that world”.

Bobbie Moline-Kramer’s Power of One installation view: left, RBG and right, Al di Là, both artworks created through 3-D printed and hand-molded acrylic plates
Bobbie Moline-Kramer’s Power of One installation view: left, RBG and right, Al di Là, both artworks created through 3-D printed and hand-molded acrylic plates

Moline-Kramer’s artwork is exhibited alongside the paintings of Antonio Pauciulo who places himself as a portraitist at the center of man’s questions about man. By setting himself the task to define himself through the mirror of the other, Pauciulo transposes this awareness of himself into the act of painting.

Antonio Pauciulo (left) Bobbie Moline-Kramer Family Tree (right)
Antonio Pauciulo (left) Bobbie Moline-Kramer Family Tree (right)

Castello 925 presents Bobbie Moline-Kramer The Power of One together with Antonio Pauciulo Artificial Creatures, in Castello 925, Fondamenta San Giuseppe through 10 July, 2022.

Stephen Maine: Typologies

by John Mendelsohn

Stephen Maine, P22-0199, 2022, 30 x 24”, acrylic on canvas
Stephen Maine, P22-0199, 2022, 30 x 24”, acrylic on canvas

“What are we looking at and what are we seeing?” That is a question, spoken or not, that pervades the experience of contemporary art. This is particularly true of the sort of art that specializes in eluding obvious imagery and easy explication. 

In Stephen Maine’s exhibition of new paintings, we are confronted by the residue of process, a material memory of what was once there. Maine layers a series of off-printings from plates made with modeling paste, extruded foam, and glue. This template is charged with paint that is then transferred to the canvas, in a process similar to a monoprint. But in this case, in a single painting the template carries color in successive printings, resulting in an image that appears as if in dimensional relief. 

With their saturated colors, the paintings have a kind of psychedelic, ruined glamour, making a painterly virtue out of the necessity of loss of image’s original source. The paintings play with our continual impulse to seek the meaningful signal in the ambient noise, like making out an image from a stain on a wall, as Leonardo noted in his description of pareidolia.  

Stephen Maine, P21-0810, 2022, 50 x 40”, acrylic on canvas
Stephen Maine, P21-0810, 2022, 50 x 40”, acrylic on canvas

The question of what we are looking at and seeing in these paintings remains the challenge within these works. They rely on our own need for paintings’ intelligibility – to make sense, even as we are immersed in sensuous intensity. These paintings seem to both stimulate and frustrate this desire, through chaos at a remove, a loss of the referent, an appeal to the grotesque. 

When we talk about Maine’s work, we cannot help but see it in relation to Richter’s early scintillating procedural abstractions, and to Warhol’s degraded silkscreen tabloid images. Into the mix we can add the work of Simon Hantaï, and his method of pliage, painting folded canvas, that when unfurled yields unanticipated results. And even further back are artists who used the stratagems of automatism, the surrealist technique used to bypass conscious control in hopes accessing a portal to the unconscious. This approach informed Pollock’s inscribing the evidence of his physical movements at a liquid distance from the canvas.

Stephen Maine, P22 0309, 2022, 25 x 20”,  acrylic on canvas
Stephen Maine, P22 0309, 2022, 25 x 20”,  acrylic on canvas

All of these artists’ work partakes in a kind of drama wherein the authentic and the automatic continually contend. Maine partakes in this as well, while maintaining a kind of optimistic faith in abstraction’s ability to remain the language of sophisticated discourse, even as it evokes a world in flux, consumed by rupture. 

The question of the artifice of art is ever-present in Maine’s work, since we experience a kind of simulacrum of the real, the gesture that is memorialized. The illusion of authenticity persists, as the work appeals to our craving for the spontaneous and the genuine.

Stephen Maine installation view
Stephen Maine installation view

This desire is put to the test by the artist’s work in the exhibition, with three larger and five smaller works. Two of the paintings are from a single template, in changing color palettes. As a whole, the Maine’s paintings here are in contrast to his work from a number of years ago, with their wall-sized scale and floating, anarchic spirit. 

Some of that wildness remains, but a new feeling of organic growth emerges in the branching, linear patterns that structure some of the works. At times, these rib-like elements vibrate in pixilated, buzzing topographies, or alternately devolve into runic entanglements. Also appearing is a new simplicity in a number of the works, with the printed elements announcing themselves with graphic clarity and high-contrast colors on evenly painted grounds.

Stephen Maine: Typologies is at Hionas Gallery, 94 Walker Street, New York from April 21 – May 7, 2022

Passion and Ego:

Robert C. Morgan, Gahae Park, and John Mendelsohn at Studio Artego Gallery

by Thalia Vrachopoulos

Robert C. Morgan, Lissajous 21, 2015-16, acrylic, metallic paints on canvas, 20x20 inches
Robert C. Morgan, Lissajous 21, 2015-16, acrylic, metallic paints on canvas, 20×20 inches

The newly opened gallery Studio Artego in Long Island City evidences the increasing de-centralization resulting from globalization and rising rental costs in Manhattan. Their April show featured a three-person exhibition entitled Passion and Ego: John Mendelsohn, Gahae Park, Robert C. Morgan curated by Soojung Hyun. Through the theme, Hyun examines the synergistic effects of the three featured artists’ individual artistic languages. The formal artistic means geometric forms, consideration of light and line are used as thematic foil to tie the artists’ work together. The title Passion and Ego, is defined by Hyun in the online catalogue accompanying the show, as the “sense of tireless dedication of an artist to his work and resultant spiritual fulfillment.” The latter idea is found in the works of the early abstractionists Vasily Kandinsky, Franz Marc, Piet Mondrian et al, who were salvationist in character, and sought a common language in their search for spiritual enlightenment.

Morphologically, the exhibit is flawless in its pristine lines and simple installation that complements the abstract nature of the works. The viewer’s eye is not interrupted by any abrupt changes or jarring elements thus, it moves smoothly around the gallery to absorb the show’s coherence. Although the exhibition contains works in different media such as painting, and paper installations they harmonize as a group. 

To begin with, Robert C. Morgan’s abstract pieces are confined to black, maroon, gold, copper, and silver. In this sense, Morgan like the Dutch modernist Piet Mondrian, minimized his color palette and reduced his forms to their simplest essence. But whereas, the latter used primary colors, Morgan’s are tertiary or mixed colors and metallic shades. Morgan’s circles and squares in their architectonic nature and coloration, are closer the Proun paintings of the Russian avant-garde artist El Lissitzky. Morgan’s forms as seen in Lissajous 21, 2015-16 (metallic paints on canvas, 20×20”) like Lissitzky’s feature shifting axes that offer us multiple spatial perspectives. 

Morgan’s Lissajous also known as a Bowditch curve, refers to a family of curves invented by Nathaniel Bowditch in 1815, that in physics is a graph of a system of parametric equations that describe complex harmonic motion enclosed by rectangular boundaries. Jules Lissajous a French mathematician later sought to develop optical methods for studying vibrations and the resultant waves or ripples/curves they caused. The three artists Morgan, Lissitzky and Mondrian have mathematics in common within their geometricity. While Morgan examines Lissajous curves and their equations, Lissitzky analogized art with the functions and systems of mathematics, and Mondrian used the Golden Ratio to produce harmony and balance in his abstractions. Morgan’s pieces are Minimal as his forms are planned with precision, and immaculately constructed while containing superb attention to detail.

Gahae Park, Music  Drawing – Rhythm and Variation, 2018 , cut paper, gouache, 24 x 30 inches
Gahae Park, Music  Drawing – Rhythm and Variation, 2018 , cut paper, gouache, 24 x 30 inches

Gahae Park also works with geometric abstraction but her media differ from those of the painters Morgan and Mendelsohn. Park creates what she calls ‘cut-out drawings’ that result in two- dimensional sculptures and installations in paper. Moreover, Park engages with a different subject matter than the other two artists in the show. She focuses on correspondences that “deeply connect with the sound and structure of music.” It was the Russian painter Vasily Kandinsky who considered music as the most abstract of all the arts who at the beginning of the 20th century corresponded with the Austrian composer Arnold Schoenberg. Their interests coincided as the latter was an exponent of atonal music and the first an abstract master. Fascinated by music’s emotional power, and being musically inclined Kandinsky analogized color and sound. Park to whom music evokes abstract space, inspired by these correspondences, produced a new type of space, one that incorporates the Eastern philosophical idea of the void in the Yin/Yang symbol of the Tao Te Ching, a Chinese philosophical text written by Laotzi ca. 400 BC expounding on Taoism. The cosmic duality of these two Taoist energies in nature Yin being the female principle and Yang the male, is believed to be both complementary and opposing simultaneously. As seen in her meticulously cut out paper work Music Drawing—Rhythm and Variation, 2018 (cut paper, gouache, 24×30”), Park allows the negative cut out spaces set at intervals corresponding to musical notes, to play with the positive space in order to produce varied and multi-tonal harmonies. 

Gahae Park, Music Drawing-Etude , 2022, cut paper, gouache, 10 x 13 inches
Gahae Park, Music Drawing-Etude , 2022, cut paper, gouache, 10 x 13 inches

Another of Park’s music drawings Music Drawing-Etude, 2022 (cut-paper, gouache. 10×13”) alludes to a piano keyboard while simultaneously to an etude or technical exercise. This idea also corresponds to an artistic experimentation or exploration in the pursuit of resolving a specific formal issue much like Claude Monet’s study of light or Degas’ study of movement. Moreover, Park crosses modalities as her synesthesia produces works that demonstrate correlated patterns that work together through emotional mediation and expression to formulate music to color association.  

John Mendelsohn, Color Wheel 1, 2020, acrylic on canvas, 30 x 21 inches
John Mendelsohn, Color Wheel 1, 2020, acrylic on canvas, 30 x 21 inches

The third artist in Passion and Ego is John Mendelsohn who is an abstract painter. One might think that the title of Mendelsohn’s painting Color Wheel 1, 2020 (Acrylic on Canvas, 30×21”) tells it all, but meaning is also imbued by the viewer whose reading of it, enriches the artwork. In an interview with David Eichholtz, Mendelsohn spoke of his series’ possible multiple meanings, mentioning among others Walter Benjamin’s “auratic work”, the wheel of life, floral forms, umbrellas, music of the spheres, etc. Formally, his paintings examine shifting visual occurrences and vision’s optical excitation. Mendelsohn’s Color Wheel series demonstrates the interaction of color resulting in sensations of simultaneous depth and movement. 

John Mendelsohn, Gate 3, 2017, acrylic on canvas, silicone, acrylic, colored sand on acetate, 24 x 18 inches
John Mendelsohn, Gate 3, 2017, acrylic on canvas, silicone, acrylic, colored sand on acetate, 24 x 18 inches

Mendelsohn’s Gate 3, 2017 (Acrylic on Canvas, Silicone, Acrylic, Colored Sand on Acetate, 24×18”) maintains viewer interest through its sensuous, painterly surface impasto as well as, its reflective qualities. He accomplishes the latter through his use of varying supports like clear acetate or foil so that, the feeling is analogous to looking through many layers. The contrast between matte and shiny surfaces and painterly, viscosity also help in giving the whole painting an air of mystery. There is also a successful dialogue between the title and the work whose multi -layering suggests a gateway or veiled entryway.

All in all, this show’s success is due to the expertise of the three artists but also to the curator’s choice and immaculate installation technique. The goal of the recent galleries opening outside of Manhattan perimeters is not only to find cheaper rents and bigger spaces, but also to make art available to geographically and ethnically diverse populations. It is worth the extra time to travel from the city if it is to see exhibits such as Passion and Ego.

Passion and Ego: Robert C. Morgan, Gahae Park, John Mendelsohn, Three Person Show: March 15 – April 29, 2022 at Studio Artego, 32-88 48th Street Unit 2, Long Island City NY 11103 www.studioartego.com

The Tao of Mary Hrbacek’s Trees

by Thalia Vrachopoulos

Mary Hrbacek, Hanging Suspended, 2008, acrylic on canvas, 40X44"
Mary Hrbacek, Hanging Suspended, 2008, acrylic on canvas, 40X44″

In her October exhibition at 107 West in New York City, Mary Hrbacek displays her series World Trees, 2015. Consisting of 24 acrylic on linen paintings, the series represents Hrbacek’s engagement and commitment to world sustainability. In a lyrical, evocative manner she accentuates the import of trees’ life-giving properties that allow humans to live and breathe. In this she recognizes that an individual working with the community can make for a real democracy. Hrbacek also realizes that there is a dark side to life and nature, as seen in her work Silver Dark Monarch, 2015 (acrylic on linen, 8×10″) that looks ominous when compared to some of her other tree paintings. Dark Monarch with its pink, black, green and silver tones recalls the withering effects of such an entity’s sovereignty. Hrbacek’s motifs are inspired by trees she came across in her travels to such places as Vermont, Italy, China, Morocco, the Czech Republic, Ireland, France and other places.

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Maelee Lee: Genesis

Verse 27: So God created mankind in his own image, in the image of God he created them; male and female he created them

by Dr. Thalia Vrachopoulos

Maelee Lee, Genesis, 2016, variable installation, multi channel video 2min. each
Maelee Lee, Genesis, 2016, variable installation, multi channel video 2min. each

Several years ago, for her new series of works, the artist Melee Lee began examining the issue of existence; being, becoming, having become – the world’s, other people’s, her own. This research led her to look at human development in general and more specifically into its issues. Consequently, this series of works involve history, humanity, while looking at diverse ethnic groups as well as the never-ending cycle of existence – life and death, as well as the establishment and demolition of nations.   

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