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  • Gorky proves worthy as abstract expressionist

    St. Louis Post-Dispatch (Missouri)
    March 5, 2006 Sunday
    FOURTH EDITION

    Gorky proves worthy as abstract expressionist

    By David Bonetti POST-DISPATCH VISUAL ARTS CRITIC



    It was Jackson Pollock who, in Willem de Kooning's words, "broke the
    ice," creating in an amazing act of inspiration the so-called "drip"
    paintings that have since defined abstract expression. But it was
    Arshile Gorky, the dark, gloom-enshrouded refugee from Armenia, who
    first found his mature voice as a painter among the artists of that
    haunted generation that helped make New York the world's art capital.

    Gorky (1904-48) was the great apprentice of his time. One after
    another, he tried on the styles of the painters of the near past,
    only to throw them off when a new avatar appeared to him. What Gorky
    did that was original and remains impressive was to combine Picasso's
    cubist space with Miro's biomorphic surrealist imagery as if they
    were one thing.

    Gorky is seldom seen hereabouts, so this exhibition MOCRA is
    presenting is greatly welcomed.

    The show, which comes from Jack Rutberg Fine Arts in Los Angeles,
    features 43 drawings from Gorky's apprenticeship years. From his
    start, Gorky was a superb draftsman, so it offers many small
    pleasures to those who appreciate fine drawing.

    What's more, it allows the forensically inclined viewer to watch a
    particular form transmute from representational to abstract to
    representational again. And for those who know them, the payoff is to
    see the genesis of the sexually charged forms that dominate Gorky's
    mature works.

    In the current show, the form to follow is kidney-shaped, which
    appears as a breast, a gourd, a peanut, a compote, a cartoon-like
    head.

    In two graphite drawings of female nudes from the mid-'30s, hung side
    by side, you can see how Gorky was pushing himself out of the
    familiar into the undiscovered. In one, a finely delineated portrait
    of a woman with a stylish '30s hairdo has been cut off from the rest
    of his drawing by a crudely scrawled rectangular frame. Below the
    cut-off point hangs a pair of large breasts turning into soft
    geometric forms. In the adjacent drawing, the entire nude is composed
    of interlocking kidney or peanut forms -- the arm and shoulder, the
    knee, the thigh/rump, the torso, the head. What Gorky had repressed
    returns to dominate.

    Despite a number of nude studies here, the still life, cubism's
    primary medium of experimentation, predominates. In these studies,
    some quite beautiful, Gorky explores the possibilities of
    representing three-dimensional form on a two-dimensional surface that
    Picasso and Braque, taking off from Cézanne, had explored earlier.

    This exhibition is as much about Hans Burkhardt as it is about Gorky.
    The Swiss-born Burkhardt (1904-94) was a student and studio mate of
    Gorky who saved a cache of works that the impulsive Gorky was
    throwing out when he was evicted. Burkhardt moved to Los Angeles in
    1937 and became one of the major abstract painters of that emergent
    cultural center.

    There are four paintings in the show. One is a portrait by Gorky of
    the young, stiff Burkhardt holding his palette. Two others are
    collaborations between student and pupil, showing various allegiances
    to Picasso and Miro. The fourth, a Cézannesque landscape of Staten
    Island by Gorky, demonstrates that Gorky was a very good apprentice.

    Brooks did better

    James Brooks (1906-1992) was born in St. Louis, but by the time he
    was 5 he moved with his family to Oklahoma and Texas. By 1926, he
    liberated himself by moving to New York, where he became a minor
    member of the abstract expressionist fraternity.

    The Greenberg Van Doren Gallery represents his estate, and in this,
    his centennial year, the gallery is showing his work. One doesn't
    know if it is intentionally a centennial show or not, because the
    gallery's promotional materials make no mention of it.

    Unfortunately, the show confirms Brooks' second-rate status. Only a
    handful of the dozen and a half works on view suggest a major talent.
    In most of the dreary abstractions, Brooks' inept drawing, jejune
    sense of composition and disregard for surface dominate the viewing
    experience. Color is Brooks' strong point, but these works fail to
    exploit even that virtue.

    "Maruga" a 1962 vibrant composition of red, white, black and gray,
    hints at what Brooks could do. I've seen better Brooks. This show
    does him no honor.

    ---

    'Gorky: The Early Years, Paintings and Drawings, 1929-1937'

    Where: The Museum of Contemporary Religious Art, 3700 West Pine Mall,
    St. Louis University

    When: Through March 12. Hours: 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., Tuesday through
    Sunday.

    How much: free

    More info: 314-977-7170 or www.slu.edu

    ---

    'James Brooks: Small Paintings and Works on Paper'

    Where: Greenberg Van Doren Gallery, 3540 Washington Avenue

    When: Through March 25. Hours: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through
    Friday; 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., Saturday

    How much: free

    More info: 314-361-7600 or www.greenbergvandoren.com
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