Genevieve Arnold: Museum of Contemporary Art of Georgia.
Auslander, Philip
Genevieve Arnold (1928-2005) was the kind of person for whom terms
like doyenne and grande dame were invented. Little known outside the
Southeast, she was an important presence on the Atlanta art scene for
more than fifty years. A recent retrospective at the Museum of
Contemporary Art of Georgia reflected her cosmopolitan perspective and
her implicit refusal to be labeled a "southern" or
"regional" artist. It also chronicled the struggles of a
midcentury painter to reconcile the twin poles of modernism: figuration and abstraction.
Arnold's first canvases, from the late '50s and early
'60s, look to Europe. Although these abstractions rely on gestural
brushstrokes and saturated, nearly monochromatic color, Arnold seems not
to have engaged directly with Abstract Expressionism. Rather, these
works are indirectly reminiscent of Henri Matisse's subdued early
paintings. For Arnold, figuration and abstraction were not mutually
exclusive: Her project was to make them coexist as equals within the
space of a single work. A series of oils from the early '70s take
up Richard Diebenkorn's planar approach. But whereas Diebenkorn
flattens landscapes and cityscapes against the picture plane, Arnold
uses the edges of planes to create perspectival space within otherwise
nonrepresentational compositions. The tension between Arnold's
commitment to a conventional use of line and space and her penchant for
abstraction would prove both productive and problematic.
This tension is apparent in Arnold's strategy of dividing her
images, either by uniting multiple paintings or drawings to constitute a
single work or by demarcating zones within each image. Points of View:
Russia, 1986, for example, an image of a palace as seen from the water,
is bifurcated by the shoreline. The upper half of the painting depicts
the landscape and the sky above it, while the lower half is devoted
entirely to water. Although the whole grisaille image is painted in dry,
calligraphic strokes, the sky and water are rendered much more freely
than the shoreline, which resembles a seventeenth-century Italian
drawing.
Untitled (Venice), ca. mid-1990s, consists of three panels joined
to form a single work. A section of a sketch of Venice on one panel
serves as the basis for an abstract painting on another. This tactic
suggests that Arnold achieved her particular perspective by looking very
closely at--and reading between the lines of--the figurative image. In
several series of works beginning in the mid-'80s, Arnold offers
both figurative renderings of places she's traveled to and
abstracted takes on parts of the same images.
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It was only in "Nile Series," a group of small works from
2000-2003, that Arnold arrived at the synthesis of figuration and
abstraction she had long sought. These once again resemble close-up
images of water, but because they are so clearly recognizable as such
they do not require another image to provide a referent. Arnold's
technique of painting in oil on tracing paper, then matting and framing
the result, dematerializes the subject, transforming its physical
substance into a play of shifting colors, flecks of light, and frothy texture. It is clear that we are looking at an image of a particular
body of water and equally clear that Arnold wants us to see it both for
what it is and as an occasion to celebrate the expressive potential of
paint in its own right.