In Transparency
November 30, 2006- January 16, 2007
Reception: November 30, 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm
636 W 28th St
Jackie Saccoccio’s latest paintings are ferocious. Her virtuosic handling of line, shape, light, and space, and her recent turn to
intense, often acidic color, confront us with a remarkably wide range of shifting, complicated visual relationships, especially in
multi-part works like =3, 2006. Beyond the formal and conceptual complexity internal to individual works, Saccoccio’s art
engages diverse and challenging artistic precedents, from the Roman Baroque (Annibale Carracci’s ceiling frescoes in the
Farnese Palace, Francesco Borromini’s Oratorio dei Filippini) to contemporary abstraction (Elizabeth Murray’s constructed
canvases). In these new works, the exuberance of transforming matter into translucency — or painting “in transparency,” as
Saccoccio puts it, in language borrowed from Jean-Paul Sartre — is bodied forth alongside the possibility of its occlusion or
collapse into darkness. But here occlusion, too, can be a source of pleasure for eye and mind, as in the appearance of the
vibrant, high-key color of Symphony No. 3 in E flat major for S. B. (2006) on top of a black-and-white wall drawing, or in the
comic scotoma of Blackish Hole (2006).
Saccoccio’s work in recent years has explored how masses, volumes, and surfaces seen in the world (rock formations, building
facades, brambles and woodland undergrowth, stones held in a hand) can be dissolved, in painting, into areas of nearly
translucent color and shapes alternately defined and distorted by line. In making the earlier works in this exhibition she often
turned to photographs and projections of photographs of large rock formations and tangled plants — the rock formations
evoking the sublime or transcendental landscapes of 19th-century art, the brambles and undergrowth associated with the
entanglements and contingencies of everyday life in the present — to produce abstract paintings that offer experiences of
perceptual and cognitive complexity thickened with bodily pleasure. Densely layered and loaded with spatial ambiguity, these
works provide glimpses of illusionism in areas that, for a moment, may seem to have been structured by one-point perspective.
By turns luscious and toughminded, the color and facture of Maelstrom (2004) are characteristic of the major paintings
Saccoccio completed in New York and Connecticut in the period before her departure for a year-long stay in Europe in 2004-
2005.
In Giverny in summer 2004, Saccoccio launched a series of drawings connected to the visual scrutiny of stones held in her right
hand as she drew with her left, a procedure that transformed her practice of drawing and led, during her time in Rome the
following winter and spring, to the production of large-scale, site-specific wall drawings like the one made for this exhibition, in
which as a rule lines do not cross. Brushed in India ink on ordinary white painted walls, the drawings set up relationships among
bounded and unbounded graphic forms that alter our experience of architectural space. As interventions in architecture and as
drawings in their own right (Corvac, 2005), Saccoccio’s recent drawings offer tactile associations keyed to a wide range of
bodily and psychic experiences — some call to mind the anthropomorphism of Courbet’s late landscapes, while others seem to
flirt with the intelligence and the would-be sexual allusions at play in Dr. Seuss.
Jackie Saccoccio holds a BFA in Painting degree from Rhode Island School of Design and an MFA degree in Painting from
School of the Art Institute of Chicago. She is a recipient of the Rome Prize from American Academy in Rome, Italy, Artist
Residency Grant from Claude Monet Foundation / Art Production Fund, Giverny, France, John Simon Guggenheim Foundation
Grant and Fulbright-Hays Foundation Grant/ Miguel Vinciguerra Award, Italy.
Books and DVDs related to artists in this show| Location | | | Gallery | Black & White Gallery | | Address | 636 W 28th St New York (Chelsea) NY, 10001 United States | | Phone | 212-244-3007 | | Fax | 212-244-3312 | | Hours | Tue-Fri 11-6 | |
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