| JOHN KISSICK New Work March 29 to April 26, 2008 |
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Opening John Kissick writes: There is a certain kind of futility attached to the artist statement
when you make work like mine. It suggests a level of intellectual
authority or conceptual boundary on work that is disingenuous. In
fact, my work method is procedurally messy, historically contingent
and just plain slippery. As a result, while acknowledging the interpretive
procedures at play in viewing painting, I have come accept the limits
of any set discourse to do justice to the raw experienceof looking. The current work is a part of a larger painting practice that
is in a critical (and at times highly problematic) dialogue with the
historical conventions of abstraction. Though it has been tempting
(and in some circles inevitable) to read the work as a knowing critique
of historical models of self-expression, it is my hope that my work
appears slightly more puzzling and unexpected, and perhaps less fixed
to any certain interpretative or critical position. Max Ernst coined the term “fever vision” in the early 1920s to describe a kind of visual delirium and psychological slippage that can occur in front of certain kinds of visual assemblages. I am finding myself increasingly attracted to this notion because of the implied emphasis, or better comfort in a certain heightened loss of control on the part of the viewer in attempting to apprehend meaning. It also implies illness, rapture--apt metaphors for the historical predicament of abstract painting. Yet through the years, the central issue of my painting has remained intact: how does one make abstract paintings that appear knowing, without succumbing to easy cynicism, or visually enticing without collapsing into feigned sentiment or pastiche. It is perhaps here that the delusion of fever enables the potential for meaning.
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