May I recognize whatever appeareth as
being mine own thought forms,
May I know them to be apparitions in
the Intermediate State
– The Bardo
Thodol, or ‘The Tibetan Book of the Dead’
Buddhist sand
mandalas are painstakingly created by several day’s effort, the monks blowing and
scraping multi-coloured piles into intricate designs, which themselves
are elaborate two-dimensional representations of three-dimensional spaces. The
process is slow, careful and meditative.
When completed, a ceremonial destruction takes place- the mandala is
swiped away, the lines of sand unravelled as meaningless swirls of colour which are then
gathered and ritually scattered- symbolising the ephemeral nature of the
material world and our earthly pretensions.
Tomma Abts
begins her paintings without any preparatory drawings, cartoons or sketches.
After an initial acrylic colour wash begins a long process of route-finding in
oil. Often many layers of heavily worked and discarded compositions are hidden away,
should she decide to obliterate the surface and begin again, or to take a
different path.
Abts’ paintings are indelibly bound up with an
idea of what constitutes ‘rightness’, correctness- with the caveat that this
can change at a moment’s notice, as such ideas are, essentially, determined by
and subject to the vagaries of the mind. Within that sandbox, many models are
built-up only to be pulled-down.
.
For anyone
who’s never ‘seen’ an Abts, the reproductions included here are less than
helpful.
What’s lost and gained
between painted object and camera/repro can be a frustrating aspect of talking
and thinking about works one has never actually encountered. Everything from
texture and physicality to colour and contrast can sometimes be strangely exaggerated,
depth and detail that isn’t really there can be convincingly suggested, while
in other works everything is de-saturated, flattened and homogenized, like
pressed-flowers.
In
reproduction, Tomma Abts’ paintings can initially seem like slickly facile,
clinical abstractions. Print and digital contexts tend to render them with
their own inert flatness and sheen, when in fact they are intensely worked,
stubbornly matte surfaces, compelling precisely because they come so near yet
fall just so far from being such glossy, unblemished renderings. Everything
that might cause the eye to slip from them in photographs is perversely what
gives them their visual traction as physical things- a certain highly pitched
tension between ‘image’ and ‘stuff’.
It’s partly
this tension – between what they are and what they are (not entirely) trying to
be, or might seem- which makes them so beguiling.
The hidden
excavations of their facture are so subtle, so dependent on close, intimate and
active inspection, that the camera misses them all but completely ('bad' photos help- as is often the case with painting- at least in terms of getting an idea of what they are actually like).
Just as
important are the folds at the corners, or the individual qualities of each
transition between art and not-art that occurs at the canvas’ edges,
transitions between accreted paint and exposed or stained fabric which are
mirrored within the front face of the painting (the paintings are begun as
light acrylic washes before being worked-out and worked-up in oil, often
leaving fissures of the original ‘dry’ weave exposed, or ridges and facets of
old, now lost, compositions); or even the thinness of their stretcher bars and
the small drop-shadows which they throw on the wall, again with a reflexive
relationship to the hermetic 3-D modelling of their ribbons and planes (though
I wouldn’t want to stress a Frank Stella-ish correspondence between stretcher
and painting too much- Abts’ structures are meandering, shifting with the seasons
of the mind, to be swiped aside if needs be).
Similarly,
their scale and slightness could almost be that of shop-bought canvases, and
there’s a similar tension between skill, sophistication, craft and amateurism (Abts works on them held in the crook of her arm, or flat on a
worktable, and in any case one imagines the condition of their making as a sitting-on-the-floor
type activity, absorbed and concentrated, rather than standing at an easel.
It’s perhaps their scale more than their aesthetics alone that have frequently
brought comparisons with East German wallpaper, a sense of ‘domestic’ rather
than studio space. This along with the relatively small scale give them a greater
warmth than might be expected).
.
We know the
kind of things they are, the kind of image- it’s been around as long as digital
rendering, the stuff of self-generating screensavers, desktop wallpapers. Or
further back, to the film titles of Maurice Binder or Saul Bass, or John
Whitney’s early computer animation, or further again, to the very early
abstract animation of Hans Richter or Oskar Fischinger.
What these
examples have in common, or rather what they’ve gotten us used to, is the idea
of abstract shapes as dynamic, modelled ‘characters’ within 3-D environments,
abstract ‘stuff’ behaving as if under the laws (or some form of the laws) of
physics- gravity, light, speed, drag, torque.
Where Abts
differs is in the application of specifically ‘painterly’ realism/illusionism.
Abstraction in
painting falls roughly into two main groups- the gestural and the hard-edge.
Generally, and in their high modernist phases, these avoided any kind of explicit
illusionism: depth, luminosity etc., if they were there, were very much seen as
properties inherent to the work rather than effects to be generated or pursued
in themselves (there might be luminosity, but no light source, depth but no
perspective, and so on).
There are of course exceptions and Abts, to an
extent, revisits some of the surrealist illusionistic-abstraction of people
like Yves Tanguy, or especially early (or late) Picabia- yet it’s inaccurate to say she’s
a surrealist, just as Tanguy is also more accurately a kind of surreal
landscape painter (Abts’ commitment to the portrait format neutralizes attempts
to see them as any kind of abstracted landscape, they are environments of the
mind if anything), while Picabia’s early abstracts also construct a more
‘sculptural’ environment, occasionally populated by figures. Nor does she chase Op-Art as an end in itself – the trompe-l'Å“il
illusionism is high-functioning, much more so than in most ostensibly
abstract art, and never merely optically suggestive or fugitive, as it might be
in Riley, or Stella or le Witt etc., never simply provisionally indicated but
more accurately calculated (usually
by careful colour decisions).
Their very
particular sense of lighting sets them apart from suprematism, vorticism, their
sobriety apart from futurism- though they could’ve grown out of these
movements, and do appear somehow purposefully dated (they could, almost, have
been something cooked up by Picabia’s restless pictorial
interrogation/dalliance).
Nor is she
even very much like the ‘abstract illusionists’ she’s sometimes compared to. ‘Abstract
Illusionism’ (a term coined by Barbara Rose in the mid 70’s) refers to a
certain kind of abstraction that admitted things like modelling and pictorial
space back in the door- sometimes leaning more ‘hard edge’ (Al Held’s
abstracted shape landscapes/spaces/objects, which can seem pretty cheesy today)
sometimes more gestural (in the work of James Harvard and Michael B Gallagher,
and arguably Laura Owens more recently, where gestural marks are given illusionistic
weight or float above the surface). It’s more famous as a language subsequently
appropriated by commercial design, particularly as 3-D rendering software
became more readily available, with all kinds of visual media incorporating
various kinds of shadowed swooshes and arbitrary planes.
With Abts the
abstract shapes and ‘characters’ are almost literally things- but what kind of things? Not the sculptural forms or spaces
of Held, nor the modelled gestures of Harvard, but something in between: they’re
always only very slightly three-dimensional objects, related to things like ribbons,
paper, things only thinly existing out-with two dimensions (as indeed painting
is an artform which takes much of its diverse effects and meanings from being
only more or less slightly-three-dimensional). They’re abstract shapes, given a
greater sense of physics via colours and lines made to interact in such as way
as to pop out and squirm.
They zero-in
on illusionism’s ways and means, to an extent, before self-cancelling the
illusion. Abts has spoken before about them as being totally self-referential,
self-identifying, that they exist completely and totally as themselves in each
one’s specific character and set of autonomous rules or conditions, with no
reference to an outside world or to a tradition, and with no intentional
metaphorical or symbolic significance. And it’s often said that this sort of solipsistic
approach ends up as a kind of ‘realism’, a kind of frankness about the
essential nature of painting by excluding extracurricular things like
represented images and meanings, that it approaches the condition of pure
thought (or a pure ‘painting’ thought). And yet, here are the shadows, the
overlaps, the artificial light and minimal/ambiguous suggestion of depth, the
negotiations of flatness and facture- as if these things, these small
illusions, allusions and pretensions are also somehow essential to painting.
Abstract as
they are it’s also hard not to see them as more or less realistic depictions of
some actual phenomena- though its next to impossible to say just what kind of
phenomena.
It’s an itchy sort
of art, the kind you get from giving thought a shadow.
.
In order to
unravel some of these problems of relative ‘realism’, it might be helpful (and/or
perverse) to bring in Heinrich Wolfflin.
Wolfflin is
probably unfashionable these days, but interesting (and influential, he taught
people like Panofsky).
In his Principles of Art History: The Problem of
the Development of Style in Later Art, Wolfflin introduced five pairs of
oppositional principles in order to distinguish what he saw as the broad shift
between classicism and the baroque:
1.
Linear
vs. Painterly (drawing and contour vs. light effects and modelling)
2.
Plane
vs. Recession (ordering the picture parallel to the picture plane vs.
emphasizing and engaging the spectator in recessional depth)
3.
Closed-form
vs. Open-form (self-contained compositions vs. the suggestion of continuous
motion or action beyond the frame, ‘iconic’ vs. feigned ‘accidental/incidental’)
4.
Multiplicity
vs. Unity (each form considered distinctly in itself vs. the unified field of
elements experienced as a totality, an overall impression)
5.
Absolute
Clarity vs. Relative Clarity (mathematical, rational and intensive
understanding of forms vs. empirical, perceptual rendering of appearances)
In Wolfflin’s
linear ‘classical’ objects are perceived by their ‘tangible character, in
outline and surfaces’, while the painterly ‘baroque’ abandons tangible design
‘by way of surrendering itself to mere visual appearance’. The dichotomy between
linear and painterly effectively establishes the conditions of the remaining
principles. In each there is a distinction between reality grasped and
represented in its clear, almost mathematical form and in its constituent parts
on the one hand, and in reality seen, perceived and represented in its
fleeting, yet limitless, dynamic appearance on the other. If the lofty classical
exists in some artificially lit, airless bell-jar, frozen in some kind of
abstracted idealized eternity, then the baroque embraces the fugitive, the
dynamic, the disorderly play of light, time and motion, the muck of the world.
Whichever position seems more ‘real’, more like the world as it is and as we
understand it or as we would wish it, is as much to do with individual artistic
approaches as it has to do with the prevailing philosophical positions of a
given time.
Which all
makes good sense when moving from the 16th to 17th
centuries, but which becomes more problematic when applied as general
principles to art since modernism. Is Rothko more classical than Pollock? Is
Abts more classical or baroque than either of them, and in what proportion? And
in what ways? (Suffice to say that she hovers between an artificial classicism,
primitivism even, of ‘light’- the ‘shadows’ are rudimentary, the pictures don’t
really admit the play of reflected light, but are more like roman still-lives,
the gradients on early-renaissance drapery, or early digital modelling
programs- and a baroque sense of unfolding, dynamic motion in her potentially
infinitely repeating compositions, for example. And yet the light and the
motion are generated through painterly colour rather than linear form per se...).
It’s not
necessary (perhaps it’s harmful) to designate a painter as being classical or
baroque in such a facetiously simplistic manner, particularly since it has been
at least a century since ‘realism’ has been chased as an end in itself- but I
would argue that Wolfflin’s principles really do offer a practical and
illuminating (not to say helpful) means of engaging in pictorial questions and
in thinking about what a work’s relative position on realism (and so, its
position on art and life) might be.
Wolfflin’s
distinctions, rich and stimulating, have yet to be genuinely factored into the
study of modern and post-modern art. They are important distinctions because
they help explain a given picture’s conception of either more or less of the
following: the nature of the material world, the nature of our mental or
perceptual understanding of the material world, the nature of realism, the
nature of painting’s negotiation of the world as realism (or not), the
essential nature of painting as an art form, whether painting that is more like
painting or painting that is more like the world is more essentially ‘painting’
(and whether painting should be ‘essentially’ painting), which kind of painting
is more like the world, which kind of painting is more like painting, which
kind of painting is therefore more ‘real’ unto itself, how an interior life of
the mind might best be represented, how the world might be ‘known’, how the
world might remain ‘unknowable’- and ultimately that any or all of these
approaches, given due attention, development and exploration, are valid
approaches to painting and to the world at large.
And perhaps
such distinctions form questions which might also (for our present purposes)
illuminate a close study of Abts’ paintings.
.
The
classical/baroque distinction asks whether the world is to be understood
mathematically, timelessly, rationally, or is it to be experienced sensually,
fugitively, empirically.
Of course,
most good art, rather than opting for one or the other, finds its forms and
meanings in the negotiation of the two. And perhaps it’s art criticism’s job to
give due consideration to these negotiations and proportions, as much to
negotiations of form and content.
Certainly
digital imagery has very distinctive ways and means of dealing with these
divergent modes of reality-perception. In some ways classical in construction-
built on mathematics, linear ‘wire-frame’ models, distinct compositional
elements, grids etc.- and yet baroque in appearance- simulating motion, blur,
light, depth and so on (and again, it’s a strange hybrid of distinct ‘elements’
patched together in the semblance of a ‘baroque’ totality). In a way, digital
imagery is a kind of hyper-classicism camouflaged behind a hyper-baroque
illusion.
When digital illusions fail (particularly in
bad CGI), it’s usually due to an imbalance of classical/baroque elements producing a kind of visual anxiety:
either too crisp or too fluid, the illusion breaks down should the image be too
crystal-clear, or too smoothed-out (especially in moving images, where the
computer struggles to totally match the very particular recipe of
fluidity/non-fluidity, clarity and non-clarity which we are so used to (and on
top of that again, CGI is usually trying to match the world as we experience it
when run together as a series of 25 still images per second, rather than as we
naturally ‘see’ it, often going so far as to include the second-hand
illusionism of faked lens flares, camera shakes and other extra-optical
phenomena...).
Perhaps Abts
could also be thought of in these hybrid terms. If we take Wolfflin’s 5
principles, her paintings seem somewhat weighted towards the classical; they
are ostensibly linear, with rudimentary ‘light’ signifiers and modelling; they
mostly follow the picture plane horizontally or vertically or, if they don’t,
they create only a shallow depth (the radiating fans are exceptions, but even
then it’s a depth that’s easily crumpled); they are, in a way, absolutely
clear, rather than relatively clear; they arrive at their own internal
rationale of forms rather than render the general appearance of some external phenomena.
And yet: her
compositions are absolutely open, with the suggestion of infinite expansion
beyond the frame (even if we cannot guess how that expansion might look or work),
rather than classically closed, self-contained forms; and further, across the
paintings are pictures which consist of distinct forms which are often in turn
inextricable from the totality of the whole, each shape’s self-identity running
out as it switches from front to back, from positive to negative, from object
to shape and back again. They defy classicism’s essential graspability,
understanding.
Part of the
meaning and significance of Abts chimerical works, then, might be this nudging
of classicism in a perceptually unstable, anxious direction: the sense we are zoomed-in
on a small part of a whole- but how small, and what kind of whole?
She makes the
rational and mathematical fugitive, baffling, flighty.
For Abts, the
self-identity of each form, and each painting, matters (each is given a name
from a directory of German Christian names). Not only that, but each one’s
difference from anything, really, that’s gone before. Each picture represents a
unique painting thought- a unique gesture of imagination towards the world.
They are
emphatically the result of a process- arrived at, not pre-meditated so much as
‘meditated’. The condition of their making is painting-thought; they narrow the
gap between thought and thing, literally and materially registering the process of thought. We can watch Abts change her mind, or allow it to be changed, by and through and within the action of painting.
In a way they
also therefore interrogate the notion of ‘expression’ within abstraction so
often taken for granted or negated altogether. They might only ‘express’
themselves, but that becomes its own kind of strength, as they each clearly
have their own speed, register, mood, poker-faced as they are.
They create
their own sequence of problems and solutions. They are a series of solutions to
problems raised by those solutions themselves.
It’s still an
elusive art. Resistant. Every time it looks as if it might settle in a certain
way it swerves. Every interpretation defied is a bullet dodged.
Which is not
to say they are critically unaccountable- there are more and less interesting
or successful ones- but that under their own terms they succeed in successfully
avoiding anything like the kind of easy, pat appeals to ‘significance’ or
content, or contemporary relevance, that critical discourse might try to write
into them.
The trick, and
trying task, of criticism that wants to say something about Abts other than
‘good paintings’ is to find new ways of writing about finding new ways of
finding worth in a painting.
Particualry
when she also limits their hardly varying scale, or the handling, or the
‘language’- they are hard to write about as they seem to risk homogeneity while
(almost) inexplicably avoiding it. They also look as if they’ll invite visual
metaphor and association- then make one feel guilty and maybe a little stupid
for thinking it. Interpretation often feels like entering attempts at a forgotten password or login, followed by a tutting Windows XP 'du-dun'.
The fact that
they are quite clearly not supposed to refer to anything means I feel quite
justified in seeing anything I like in them. To a degree. Or at least, I feel
they encourage (tolerate?) some measure of free-form projection.
Sometimes I
think of what goes on inside CD players. Conversions between forms or
translations between languages. They can look like harpsichord strings and
hammers, but with a platinum prism sheen, or looms and threads, crazy paper
engines. Crinkled party-bag paintings, origami paintings, wrapping-paper paintings. Adrian Searle called
them ‘fans in the hands of animated Andalucians’, speaking of lost forms of
communication, fluttering semaphore. Or less than elegant hotel carpets, crusty
and faded. Bus-seat upholstery. Lampshades. Or none of these things.
They present a
linguistic challenge- trying to speak or write about what they conjure up is
part of the joy of them.
They function
partly on the principle that human consciousnesses are able to consider things
in and of themselves and as things
upon which to extrapolate and project, things upon which to consider. The
‘two-things-at-once’ tension/sensibility, which is the driver of all art and
metaphor, all poetry. And if poetry does it in 'comparative', methaphoric literature, painting
does it in matter on surfaces either more or less illusionistic.
.
In looking at
Abts you have to ask stupid questions. What is casting the light in this
netherworld? How big are the things? How thick are the ribbons, and how long?
Shapes are
given light and space- but what kind of light, and what space? What are the
shapes made of? Paint, yes, but what are they really made of?
This, and
their confounding specificity, is what is haunting and hypnotising about them.
The deeper you
look in, the more individually nestled paintings emerge, smaller and smaller,
unfurling flags of utter confusion.
They are
somewhat like the experience of reading when tired, and realizing that you’ve
not taken in the slightest iota of the last few pages’ contents. (You might
also get the feeling of ‘why am I still reading/looking at this?’, but you’ll
leave the lamp on anyway. In fact, the colours have a kind of de-saturated
lightbulb or halogen light, hazy and potentially unhealthy, strobing and humming. Abts has
described herself how a seemingly ‘bright’ red on the picture is really a
dullish brown on her palette).
There is an
insomniac quality, thought running on low battery, recirculating the remaining
energy, looping an over-tired consciousness.
.
Try drawing an Abts from memory.
.
I would have outsmarted them or, at a
minimum,
flicked their coins back like
sharp-edged playing
cards or swung the rosary beads like a
Filipino Balisong
had I not vomited spaghetti alphabet
all over the spring-time
grass and fake-white silk and girlhood;
disgusted
at the injustice of being small and
atheist and inarticulate.
-Communion Afternoon, Caoilinn
Hughes
There is perhaps an un-gendering that
happens across the paintings- the Christian-name titles are neutral, and the
works themselves seem to neutralize the gender signifiers that might be thrown
at them. The pretty paper and ribbons are almost weaponized, made sharp or
entangling, baffling, the forms as much as ‘meanings’ wriggle free, or fly off
with the ease of a hummingbird, or a butterfly, or a dazzle ship.
In a sense
it’s an un-gendering of feminine images of delicate things (and laborious
‘pastimes’)- rendering them by turns more pointed or solid, or more fluid,
constantly outsmarting whatever language or ideas might be applied to them-
with the obvious caveat that my saying all this is also outsmarted, flicked
back at me like sharp-edged playing cards...
In some ways Abts recalls the work of Christina Ramberg (a painter associated with the Chicago Imagists of the 60’s-70’s). Ramberg’s abstracted paintings of the push and pull of ‘feminizing’/classicizing structures – plaits, coils, braids, wired underwear and corsets- re-appropriate, with alternating fascination and disparagement, the very notions of ‘re-composition’ that such structures and devices are used to achieve (usually male-defined models of beauty, sexuality or power). Along with their slightly early/mid-modern feel, their reflexive play with notions of constriction and reshaping, prettifying and armouring can’t help but recall Abts’ play with soft and sharp, unfolding and defensively interwoven, interlocking forms.
At the touch of an idea they tend to roll up like ferns.
.
In a way there
is something close to delirium in them, like childhood illnesses staring at
embossed wallpaper. Or moments of distracted absorption generally- staring at the ceiling,
staring at the carpet. Picking at woodchip walls and wicker chairs. Sunbeams through blinds. Getting lost in curtains. The mind entering itself, or
H.G. Welles’ Mind at the End of Its
Tether.
Indeed the
logical utopian endgame is to exist as beings of thought alone, as Welles
(quite disturbingly) put it-
a way
of living in which understanding will be the supreme interest in life, and
beauty a mere smile of approval. So it is at any rate in the Dreamland to which
my particular Happy Turning takes me. There shines a world ‘beyond good and
evil’, and there, in a universe completely conscious of itself, Being achieves
its end. (The Happy Turning)
It’s uncertain
just what kind of shape Welles might have seen for this world. But it does seem
to suggest (as with Buddhist teaching) that it would to some extent transcend
the purely material, or even the moral. It’s bracingly un-berthed. Abts
paintings, at least, appear to be universes completely conscious of themselves.
Closer to Abts
paintings is perhaps a poem by William Carlos Williams, On Gay Wallpaper:
The green-blue
ground
is ruled with
silver lines
to say the sun
is shining
And on this moral sea
of grass or dreams lie flowers
or baskets of desires
Heaven knows what they are
between cerulean shapes
laid regularly round
Mat roses and tridentate
leaves of gold
threes, threes and threes
Three roses and three stems
the basket floating
standing in the horns of blue
Repeating to the ceiling
to the windows
where the day
Blows in
the scalloped curtains to
the sound of rain
I think the key to the poem, and
to Abts’ paintings, is the juncture where the wallpaper meets the window, the
outside world (which is paradoxically hung like a picture of rainy daylight in
the context of the abstracted, wallpapered room), the point where the paintings
meet the wall, their own edges, the real world.
The window (with its light, air, water) is the dramatic climax of the poem, its release- just as Abts paintings come alive when walked around, walked up to, seen through doorways, lit by windows, seen on walls as things. Looked at by people.
The window (with its light, air, water) is the dramatic climax of the poem, its release- just as Abts paintings come alive when walked around, walked up to, seen through doorways, lit by windows, seen on walls as things. Looked at by people.
Perhaps when
people see wallpaper in her paintings it is less the shapes or aesthetics and
more wallpaper’s negotiation of pattern/world; the way it gets broken up by
furniture and shadows, interrupted by doorways; the way it sits as a thinly
embossed surface; the way it’s part of the room yet also somehow an alternative
to the room.
In the
wallpaper, Williams sees the pattern of the world- threes, threes and threes,
ruled lines, repeating- yet the world of the wallpaper/art exists at some
oblique angle to our own, reflecting and abstracting its structures. It is
possible to enter it to a degree, but only in patches within frames: it stops
at the window, comes up short, the infinity of ruled lines reach the ceiling,
the window ledge, and stop. The abstracted eternity meets the transitory phenomenological environment. The sound of the rain breaks the silence of the
silent wallpaper world- the two remain related yet irreconcilable.
For Williams
as for Abts, even decorative, ostensibly meaningless surfaces open up a point
of departure and enrapture, a secondary universe which is ultimately the
universe of the mind.
.
Like a
circle in a spiral
Like a wheel within a wheel
Never ending nor beginning
On an ever-spinning reel
As the images unwind
Like the circles that you find
In the windmills of your mind...
Like a wheel within a wheel
Never ending nor beginning
On an ever-spinning reel
As the images unwind
Like the circles that you find
In the windmills of your mind...
-
- The Windmills of Your Mind, Alan
and Marilyn Bergman
.