Rosy Keyser: Peter Blum.
Hudson, Suzanne
Inside of a three-month span in late 1811 and early 1812, four
massive earthquakes--and thousands of aftershocks--convulsed the
midwestern and southern United States. Emanating from the New Madrid
fault line, they were felt as far away as New York City and Boston. As
in an episode from some apocalyptic tract, fissures opened, lakes were
drained and re-formed, and, in what seemed the ultimate act of divine
intervention, the Mississippi River changed course and appeared to flow
backward. On December 15, 1811, Scottish naturalist John Bradbury was
docked just upstream from the Chickasaw Bluffs (the future Memphis),
asleep until startled by "a most tremendous noise." "All
nature seemed running into chaos," he recollected, "as wild
fowl fled, trees snapped and river banks tumbled into the water."
One of the disaster's few written accounts (owing to the damage
occurring in a region marked by widespread illiteracy), the story
nonetheless transmuted into evangelical oral history, signifying not an
aberrant almanac season, but the end of the world.
Long forgotten--if cannily relevant to our own ecologically
numbered days--this natural-cum-theological event returned as the
oblique subject of Rosy Keyser's first New York solo show.
"Rivers Burn and Run Backward" was comprised of a suite of
works on paper and a handful of massive, self-proclaimed (albeit
ironically, one feels) "neo brut" paintings, including one
called New Madrid, 2007. Suggesting the urgency of a manifesto, the
surface of New Madrid is puckered and congealed into rippling orbs the
color of a starless sky and the consistency of tar. Its glossy enamel
seems about to bleed, while its sawdust encrustations admit to a
narrative of durational process as humbly object-bound as it is
visionary. Dyed with ink, stretched, painted, restretched, and so on,
this is painting turned in on itself--think Steven Parrino stripped of
baroque theatrics. But other works, too, conjure a lost or failing
world. Red Bird, 2007, for example, is a messy contraption bisected by a
string spine woven into the thickly painted hemp support, from which
with the flimsiest Mylar shreds, interlaced with the filaments,
protectively ward off advance. Folk Conjugation, 2007, is a composition
whose shadowy background becomes denser as it approaches the picture
plane, but still offers dying animals only the barest undergrowth in
which to retreat.
Indeed, Keyser's work is all about flux and impermanence, and
while Buddhist principles waft in and out of titles and appropriated
stuff alike--the intimate paean Deed to Life and Death in Baltimore,
2008, being exemplary in this regard, with one of its layers of
carefully dog-eared pages, one of which discusses the Four Noble Truths,
mounted to a support and sprinkled with minuscule granules of wood--the
same arguments obtain by virtue of materials alone. Sawdust appears
frequently, a testament to the practical uses of industrial by-products,
with Keyser scooping up discarded timber and making of it something
else; similarly, her use of obsidian, cooled to glassine perfection from
molten lava, privileges temporality and metamorphosis. Wood particles
become mental quicksand, and volcanic refuse a pernicious, prickly gold.
Take Revelation, 2008, a sawdust painting that traces various materials
as they rain down the paper's summit, the recurrent sawdust
emitting beads of color before shading into twine frayed at the edges
from having been on fire (and taunting further destruction and
reconstitution, still). Or Monterey, 2007, and Rugburn, Whiskey Back,
2008, elemental pictures that hover on razor's edges of awkwardness
and elegance--the former an inky expanse punctuated with rainbowlike
mica and the latter specked with shards of obsidian, that, as the title
implies and the rest of Keyser's work advises, can impart a nasty
sting if grasped too tightly.
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