Norman Zammitt: Carter & Citizen.
King, Jennifer
Here's a telling anecdote about Norman Zammitt's
large-scale paintings: His monumental North Wall, 1977, which featured
prominently in the J. Paul Getty Museum's "Pacific Standard
Time: Crosscurrents in L.A. Painting and Sculpture, 1950-1970," was
found displayed not on the walls but on the ceiling of its owners'
bedroom when it was tracked down by the show's curators for their
2011-12 exhibition. The painting's horizontal installation was
ostensibly necessitated by its monumental size--eight by fourteen feet.
But the decorative appeal of Zammitt's big striped paintings (the
very quality that might inspire a collector to mount one on the ceiling)
may also explain why the late artist is so little known outside Los
Angeles: His large works can veer uncomfortably close to '70s-style
interior design.
The recent exhibition of Zammitt's small paintings at
LA's Carter & Citizen gallery demonstrated just what a
difference scale can make. Like the painter's mural-size works, the
small pieces bear an obvious relationship to nature, composed as they
are of gradated bands of color that evoke brilliant sunsets or shifting
hues of sky over water. But the diminutive size of these works also
allows them to keep one foot in the realm of abstraction. Executed on
canvas board and mounted to float an inch or so off the wall, the
smaller paintings--some the size of a postcard--are scaled to the eye
rather than the body, allowing a greater separation from the
phenomenological effects of the landscape-like larger paintings.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
With works drawn entirely from the artist's estate, the Carter
& Citizen show nicely represented the California artist's
signature technique of chromatic scaling. For example, in Green One II,
1977, seventeen bands of color compose a sixteen-by-twelve-inch work.
Beginning with a wide strip of light blue at top, the composition
descends along sixteen incrementally narrower bands that also progress
in hue until, at the lower edge of the painting, the piece is anchored
by a thin line of deep navy, roughly a quarter the width of the
uppermost stripe. Between these poles, the intervening registers make
their way through a spectrum of blue-green to green-blue. But the
gradation occurs even within each of these intermediate stripes, the
ever-so-slight movement along the spectrum apparent only upon closer
view.
Among his contemporaries, Zammitt was known for employing
scientific techniques and mathematical logarithms to execute his
compositions. But of the ten pieces in this show, the paintings that
appeared freshest were arguably the simplest. One thinks of Red to
Green, 1975, a five-by-seven-inch canvas composed of just seven equally
spaced, solid-colored bands. Somewhat overshooting the range promised in
the title, the colors in Red to Green pass through an unexpected but
visually satisfying combination of primary hues and offbeat tones: red,
two shades of orange, mustard yellow, avocado green, dark green-blue,
and dark blue. Here, Zammitt dispenses with the spiritual overtones and
optical illusions explored in many of his other paintings (e.g., his
"Elusive Eureka" works) in favor of a straightforward study in
color.
Perhaps the most striking aspect of Zammitt's simplest
compositions is their uncanny way of seeming at once immediate yet
distinctly out of time. If his large-scale paintings can be connected to
the '70s moment during which they were made, the works on view
here--Red to Green or the equally basic Black to White,
1974-80--appeared more the product of Bauhaus-era exercises than
monuments of Light and Space, a movement with which Zammitt is
frequently associated.
According to the gallery, none of the works on view had ever been
shown in a proper exhibition, a fact that suggests Zammitt himself may
have considered them to be studies. But if this artist is to receive
greater art-historical consideration--which is likely, given his
inclusion in "Pacific Standard Time"--then his small paintings
should play some role in his critical reevaluation. And as an added
bonus, there will be no concerns as to whether or not they'll fit
on the walls.