Katy Moran; Andrea Rosen Gallery.
Hudson, Suzanne
Katy Moran's solo debut at Andrea Rosen Gallery proved as
"riveting" as the press release trumpeted, despite the fact
that nobody could quite agree on what her abstract paintings are about,
where they come from, or what they finally depict. Brushed and smeared
in a romantic palette of muted olives and ochres, supported by fleshy
peach or flecked with vital red, and relieved by occasional daubs of
turquoise and crisp neutrals, Moran's diminutive, domestic-size
canvases can read as landscapes, seascapes, portraits, or anything but.
Indeed, they seemingly bait critical appraisal while embarrassing easy
circumscription, bringing to mind nothing so much as Henry James's
"The Figure in the Carpet" (1896) and its thematization of
hermeneutics. Variously described as something that critics missed, a
secret, a trick, and, most famously, "a complex figure in a Persian
carpet," the enigmatic import of protagonist Hugh Vereker's
own novel structures James's narrative. The story's meaning
thereby deferred and ultimately refused, it becomes a highbrow caper in
which what is pursued is none other than signification itself.
In a similar manner, Moran's scumbled, nervy compositions
suggest potential referentiality without making a "complex
figure" patent. For though Moran culls her source images from the
Internet, design magazines, snapshots, and elsewhere, she also inverts
them and, with great gusto, pushes them into messes of pigment whose
lush materiality plays against the potentially legible details that
uncannily emerge. Moran actually considers a painting finished only when
she can recognize some figurative element in the colors and shapes
therein; they remain oddly intimate for reasons that are elusive. Coy
titles aid in this process: Nature Boy, 2007; Smoker's cas,
Junction, 2007; Wasabi without Tears, 2007; Shycat, 2008, and Lenny K,
2008. So, too, of course, do the works themselves, as Moran's
blurred canvases hiccup signs, whether a watery vista enveloped in
atmospheric haze in Lucas, 2007, or the plume of purple, brown,
cranberry, putty, and emerald feathers in Pecking Order, 2008. Most
paintings here evince some such hook and resonate across the
installation. Wasabi without Tears, for one, assumes the look of a
conflagration, as Wilma, 2008, picks up the wasabi as its background
shade.
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Some works employ empty centers or, conversely, allow dense
accumulations to hover there. Volestere, 2007, looks like a violent
fracas with a circular vortex, as much Road Runner cartoon as Dutch
genre scene,
although it cannot help but be redolent of Gustave Courbet's
yawning Ornans grave as well. Equally macabre, Hooper's Retreat,
2008, struck me as indebted to Gericault's morgue studies: rotting
flesh as still life. Likewise, gestural passages in Big Wow, 2007 -- all
custards and browns in spikes above comparatively languid washes--admit
a New York School pedigree, while Meeting in Love, 2007, improbably
channels Turner's frothy seascapes through chalky strokes arcing
toward a high horizon, rendering them appropriately sinister. By
contrast, Lucas is wraithlike, a jumble of blues and other colors in an
airy expanse of white, connoting nothing so much as an idyll. Like so
many of these works, it appears as a detail from some other setting,
cleaved, decontextualized, and resized, perhaps bearing down on an
unknown Impressionist's facture--another instance of an elaborate
staging of disambiguated "secrets" that might be unearthed as
the phantom of style.