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| Julie Mehretu, Ruffian Logistics, 5 ft. x 11 ft., ink and acrylic on canvas, 2001 |
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Inside The Project, at 427 W. 126th Street, one finds an art scene unexpected uptown. While haphazardly stumbling upon the gallery is unlikely for most of New York’s art audience, it is well worth the journey. Both domestic and international artists frequent this piece of lower-east avant-garde tucked into Harlem. Julie Mehretu’s giant canvases made themselves at home on the rough-edged walls of The Project from November 18 to December 22, 2001. Looming in the main hall was Retopistics: A Renegade Excavation. Once in sight, the viewer becomes fixated on processing the work’s various layers. It is a mess of different elements going about their business. Yet, one senses order. The layers start to separate themselves, but never so much that they can be viewed as purely distinct. One cannot analyze one layer without falling into another. Nonsensical shapes and events populate the 8’x18’ vellum canvas. Thick geometric blobs hover above sheets and sheets of frantic lines, translucent wrappers of battles, blueprints, and buildings. Upon closer examination, one notices that the work is composed of four different structured layers. Layer 1. Layer 2. Layer 3. Layer 4. |
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On the second floor, one encounters Rise of the New Suprematists. This 8’x10’ piece also has the characteristic layered line schema in ink on vellum, only this time minus the kitschy acrylic elements. There are also smaller works that seem like studies. It is nice to be let in on the progression leading to the monstrous and lovely confrontational piece downstairs. One of my favorites looks like a hedgehog, dare I assign representation. I can, however, offer two interpretations of Mehretu’s works. Option 1.
Option 2. Suprematism is the rediscovery of a notion of pure art that, in the course of time, had become obscured by the accumulation of things. Feeling is free to assume an external form. Malevich stressed that the name of the new style referred to the supremacy of pure feeling in art over art’s objectivity. The most simple geometric forms squares, triangles, circles, or intersecting lines composed into dynamic arrangements on the flat surface of the canvas can express the sensations of speed, flight, and rhythm. Meaning is no longer constrained to the canvas. Most importantly, the viewer’s confrontation with a combative circus of lines can signify everything or nothing. Order tucks into chaos. Meaning becomes subjective. Should we back off or jump into a layer of needling hash-marks that promise to escort us into yet another ballistic dimension? If the structural layers are an abstract representation of social or psychological processes, it is fascinating to read a statement about non-objectivity in the very next level (i.e. the flying acrylic shapes). It is a swirling contradiction: extracting meaning from the blueprint level is futile when taken with the non-objectivity of the cumbersome acrylic shapes. Subjectivity, abstract representation, non-objectivity, chaos, order: all clash and mesh perfectly well in Mehretu’s structural riddle. Even if it seems complex, it’s undeniable that any meditation on interpretation will lead to another…and ultimately to the grand-daddy of conclusions: the chaos/order meditation. She accomplishes this beautifully, reminding us that we all incessantly contemplate the relationships between feeling and objective reality, between chaos and order. I am comfortable with either reading of Mehretu’s work, either the abstraction or the raw reaction. There is room for more or less thought. With Rise, I will candidly admit that I became happily occupied just with connecting the dots. The insane proliferation of inky events forced me to actively follow the tracks, staving off the pressure of over-intellectualizing (at least for a little while). Mehretu’s work concerns the space between the piece and the viewer. In this space, the viewer is free to run amok in the intricately psychotic structure and reach his or her own conclusions. We must thank The Project for giving us the opportunity to witness such a provoking spectacle. Perhaps there is a new Harlem Renaissance in the making, a restructuring of northern Manhattan with an emphasis on art. No doubt, there are traces of beginnings with galleries like The Project and artists such as Julie Mehretu. Columbia take note. |
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