SANTA FE REPORTER - OCTOBER 4TH 2006
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Zane’s World: Laurence’s
Lament
By Zane Fischer

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Sometimes, in the
wide and blurry-bordered world of contemporary art, it’s tough to understand what exactly an artist is getting
at. Often—too often—it’s because the artist probably
has only the vaguest of intentions behind the work, but the artist
is pretty sure that if it involves oceanographic taxidermy, high-tech
polymer blends and, just maybe, sexy nurses made to be slightly gauzy
and grotesque, some critic, gallerist, curator or technocrat millionaire
somewhere will take the bait and be happy to do their own armchair
hypothesizing about the deeper meaning of art that is overtly cool,
casually creepy and markedly ambitionless in terms of theory, position
or talent. Rarely—too rarely—an artist’s work takes
a serious commitment to understand because it is so precise, so careful
and maintains such a consistent level of dialogue in terms of both
craft and concept that it is impossible to digest in a single sitting,
impossible to know entirely, like a lover, even after years of intimacy.
These rare works are, also like a lover, not difficult to appreciate
at the first meeting—but there are clues, choices and nuances
that linger, like scent haunts memory, compelling you to dig and
fret at deeper motives and truer meanings.
If, during the month of September,
you found occasion to be on Palace Avenue and if, on that occasion,
you possessed half a whit of taste, you will know I’m talking about Geoffrey Laurence’s
exhibition at LewAllen Contemporary (129 W. Palace Ave., 988-8997). |

LewAllen
Contemporary recently showcased Geoffrey Laurence’s one-man rebellion against human evil—and
bad painting. (Geoffrey Laurence, “Hold Fast,” 2006.)
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Laurence’s
work is emotionally provocative. His command of figure and portrait
is so complete that when the full length of a man in prison garb
fills a narrow, dark canvas, staring out at the viewer, it’s
necessary to confront his resigned gaze, his jutting lip, his hand
gripping the rough fabric at his side as though they were one’s
own sensations. It is not immediately necessary to wonder at the
yellow scarf around the man’s neck, its bright and fluent contours
popping up through a Styxian dark. It’s not imperative to wonder
at the title, “Those the River Keeps,” though its mythic
implications are clear enough. But that scarf, or the meticulous
fold in the head wrap of another figure just edging off the canvas,
is an element that will ghost the eyes and simmer for a good long
time. Laurence revealed much about his process, if not about the
symbolism his painter’s hand imbues in a scarf or a gesture,
by exhibiting studies for “Those the River Keeps,” including
a panorama of eight figures standing in a low barge braving the dark
with a menorah, as well as individual portraits of each figure.
All
this for a finished canvas that barely reveals three of the figures
and shows only one in full. But the grand painting Laurence
probably longs to make requires the support
of a modern Medici—it wouldn’t be the kind of endeavor
that brooks anything as pedestrian as paying the electric bill or meeting
a gallery’s exhibition schedule. |
The days of patronage and grand
paintings are clearly near and dear to Laurence—not only does he paint with the finesse and élan
of those casually referred to as “old masters,” but a
favorite technique is to juxtapose baroque and rococo paintings with
contemporary subjects. This is done to strongest effect when the
artist renders a background in lusty monochrome chiaroscuro, with
only the subject immediately in the foreground given over to startling
full-spectrum color and shade. In “Quetzal,” a sort of
twin to the exhibition’s title painting, “The Reality
of Things,” a contemporary odalisque stares directly out of
the painting’s frame, her tender body resting horizontally
on the floor while a drape across her midriff extends up into the
arms of several mischievous putti in a blue-tinted detail of Francois
Boucher’s “Jupiter in the Guise of Diana.” Alongside
the head of the odalisque is a lone, partially curled feather. Is
it the feather of a quetzal? Is it meant to draw a parallel or a
struggle between the Mesoamerican plumed serpent deity Quetzalcoatl
and the Greco-Roman Jupiter, who frequently took different forms,
including birds, to act out his seductions such as the one depicted
in the Boucher image that Laurence uses? I wasn’t able to answer
these questions in one or two visits, but the intrigue of it, laid
out with as much precision as the eloquent play between background
and foreground, between “real painting” and “portrayed
painting,” is a seduction all its own.
Perhaps the most potent and many-layered
painting in the exhibition was “Hold Fast.” Three soldiers, maybe from today’s
war, maybe Joes from World War II, sit on a bench in varied stages
of shell-shocked grit, in front of a hazy-hued and magnificent rendition
of Peter Paul Rubens’ “Rape of the Daughters of Leucippus.” The
potential implications are nearly bottomless, but one rings particularly
loud, especially in context of the whole exhibition. The story of
the Rubens painting, wherein the rape is committed by Jupiter’s
sons Castor and Pollux, really begins with Jupiter’s own seduction
(or rape) of Leda, when he took the feathered form of a swan. Since
at least the time of the poet William Butler Yeats, a critical interpretation
of the story of Leda and the swan can be that violence begets violence.
In Yeats’ Leda poem, a momentary gratification, a “shudder
in the loins,” culminates in the dark eventual future of that
union: the birth of Castor and Pollux, but also of Helen and, finally, “Agamemnon
dead” and all that transpires between those events, most notably
the Trojan War. Thus, as Margaret Carroll suggests in The Erotics
of Absolutism: Rubens and the Mystification of Sexual Violence, rape
can instigate and even be equivalent to genocide. And rape, as we
see in the current geopolitical climate, may be performed wholesale
across an entire culture.
“Jupiter in the Guise of Diana,” incidentally, may be
purchased as a lithograph from http://framedart.walmart.com, where
Boucher’s Wal-Mart biography includes the curious sentence, “He
was morally censured for his scandalous depictions, but this happy
time was not to last.” A final layer in Laurence’s stand
against fear and mediocrity, then, is a painted disdain for the lazy
idiocy of a culture that commits a genocide of the soul by allowing
a master’s painting to require no more attention than a greeting
card.
© Copyright 2000-2006 by
the Santa Fe Reporter
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INVITATION FRONT / BACK |
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Geoffrey Laurence truly is a new master, superbly painting
in a classical tradition of painstakingly detailed representation,
underpainting and chiaroscuro, but also imbuing in his imposing canvasses
a distinctly modern reflection of matters beyond art: disturbing
and though-provoking subjects and emotions like fear, envy, disgust,
loneliness, alienation and oppression. In technique. he emulates
the great painters of the Renaissance. Combining contemporary sensibility
with superb classical technique, Laurence creates paintings that,
quite often, are shockingly powerful as socio‑political statements
while also being extraordinarily beautiful.
His work has included deeply serious paintings that require the
viewer to think. Some paintings honor the many members of his extended
family and others who were victimized in the Holocaust simply for
being, like himself, Jewish. Others set contemporary figures against
backgrounds of Renaissance or Baroque paintings, juxtapositions that
present the viewer with ambiguities of interpretation that are at
times wry and at times profoundly moving. Yet others, Renaissance‑style portraits
of an imaginary aristocratic family, inject Surrealistic elements
that might be seen on one hand as amusing touches of nonsense and
on the other as sardonic emblems of deceit or vanity. All are powerful,
beautiful and are among the finest painting being done today |
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Artwork
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