Barbara Ellmann: An Open Book 2 at the Marks Art Center

I had the great pleasure of seeing Barbara Ellmann’s dynamic exhibition, An Open Book 2, at the Walter N. Marks Center for the Arts in Palm Desert, California last month. The exhibition, which ran from February 4 to March 11, was partially funded by the McCallum Theatre Institute’s Aesthetic Education Program, produced in conjunction with the Marks Art Center at the College of the Desert and was beautifully curated by Sophia Marisa Lucas. The Marks always presents terrifically exciting, innovative shows and I am continually impressed by the quality of their curatorial focus. An Open Book 2 was no exception.

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For more information about the Marks Art Center and Barbara Ellmann:

http://www.collegeofthedesert.edu/community/gallery/Pages/default.aspx

https://barbaraellmann.com

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Donald Martiny: Gestures at Madison Gallery

In a world that is more and more removed and isolated, where finding contact and gesture and movement, both abstract and emotional, is increasingly difficult, Donald Martiny’s expressively lyrical solo, Gestures, at Madison Gallery in La Jolla, California is refreshingly immediate.

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Alanic, 2014, Polymer and dispersed pigment on aluminum, 55 x 44 inches

One is instantly struck by the work’s visceral movement and vibrant color. But it would be too easy to reduce these forms to simply a discussion of color and flow. These enlarged brushlike strokes, formed from polymer and saturated pigment, are visual poems. They are the painterly equivalent of a verbal haiku, deceptively lean, but on reflection as complex and inevitable as breath. The simplified structure allows the viewer to look deeper. The swaths of undulating paint, dotted with glimpses of hidden color and seemingly random trace gesture, draw us closer, enticing us with their history. And the sensual , almost liquid quality of the forms woos us, like the touch of someones hand on bare skin, light but electric, the movement fleeting but the sensation enduring. The touch simple in form but resonant in understanding. That sensation is rare in this world of detachment. But as these paintings attest, and as has been said many times, “the simplest gesture is the most profound.” It is indeed.

http://www.donaldmartiny.com

http://www.madisongalleries.com

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Left: Togoyo, 2014, Polymer and dispersed pigment on aluminum, 68 x 43 inches

Right: Kore, 2015, Polymer and dispersed pigment on aluminum, 59 x 44 inches

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Togoyo, 2014, Polymer and dispersed pigment on aluminum, 68 x 43 inches

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Kore, 2015, Polymer and dispersed pigment on aluminum, 59 x 44 inches

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From left: Kott, 2015, Polymer and dispersed pigment on aluminum, 88 x 5 inches

Ofo, 2015, Polymer and dispersed pigment on aluminum. 77 x 3 inches

Weyto, 2014 Polymer and dispersed pigment on aluminum. 91 x 46 inches

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Weyto, 2014 Polymer and dispersed pigment on aluminum. 91 x 46 inches

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Ngbee, 2015, Polymer and dispersed pigment on aluminum. 44 x 90 inches

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Laua, 2015, Polymer and dispersed pigment on aluminum, 76 x 77 inches

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