David Reed 2007
November 8, 2007- December 22, 2007
Reception: November 8, 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm
511 W 22nd St
Max Protetch is pleased to announce an exhibition of new work by
David Reed. Occupying both the main
gallery and the Project Space, the exhibition will feature paintings in several formats, including narrow
vertically-oriented canvases that recall Reed’s earliest brushstroke paintings; medium-format horizontal
paintings that seem to relate to the scale of television and large-format ones that maintain dialogue with
the proportions of Cinemascope; large-scale vertical paintings; and #27, a narrow vertical painting from
1974. In a departure for Reed, most of the paintings in the exhibition will inhabit a consistent range of
colors, based in both warm and cool grays and blacks.
This is
David Reed’s fifteenth exhibition with
Max Protetch over a period of thirty-two years, a period
spanning the history of the gallery in both New York and Washington, DC. Widely recognized by younger
painters as a major influence, Reed has worked to recontextualize abstract painting within the greater
visual culture, especially with regards to time-based media like film. By so doing, he has brought a strong
narrative element to abstraction. He has also posed crucial questions about time-honored aspects of
painting, proposing new ways in which emotional and psychological information can pass through
gesture, color, proportion and light and examining how paintings interact with architecture. In his work,
abstraction can be seen as methodology for exploring how we sublimate and celebrate signification
through cinematic gesture, chiaroscuro, reproduction, expressionism, surface, light.
In the new paintings on view at
Max Protetch, the variations on these themes strike resonances both
within and without Reed’s oeuvre, subverting the notion of linear progression from year to year and
painting to painting. Implicit is the relationship between painted mark, support, and the human body, a
relationship foregrounded in the gallery’s Project Space by the juxtaposition of #27 with a new, large
vertical painting, which will allow the viewer to trace the elaboration of the brushed mark in the work ––
less a strict linear development than an expanding circumference of approach.
In the group of narrow vertical paintings, both frenetic and swooping marks provide a foundation for
glazes of various hues. Small fragments of brushstrokes climb the central spine in each work forming a
visual and gestural index. Reed’s marks can allude to or resemble photographs of brushstrokes, and
while this quality continues to figure in these works, the small strokes in the center of the narrow paintings
seem to suggest or imply presence and absence in a different way. They are wholly embodied, yet feel
as if they have been spliced from some other context, called into offer counterpoint in new visual
arrangement.
A group of wide vertical paintings also incorporate these ‘spine’-like marks. Working within a range of
grays and warm and cool yellows, Reed has juxtaposed several kinds of gestures, building layers of
conflicting and coordinated sections. The paintings seem to point toward a degree of disorientation,
demarcating spaces beyond the works’ edges and opening up zones within and around each layer of
paint. Such spaces, both excluded and included, help create an emotional register of sudden, violent loss
even though their building blocks are moments of formal possibility.
In 2005 Reed was the subject of a retrospective, Leave Yourself Behind, which has toured institutions
across the United States. Among other exhibitions, he has recently participated in Lust for Life, The
Ricke Collection (curated by Christiane Meyer-Stoll) at Kunstmuseum Liechtenstein, Vaduz; Das Kapital,
Blue Chips and Masterpieces at the Museum für Moderne Kunst, Frankfurt; and Brave Lonesome
Cowboy: Western Topoi in Contemporary Art or: For John Wayne’s 100th Birthday (curated by Konrad
Bitterli and Andreas Bauer) at Galerien der Stadt Esslingen, Villa Merkel, Germany and Kunstmuseum St.
Gallen, Switzerland. He instigated and was the advisor for the exhibition High Times, Hard Times: New
York Painting 1967-1975, curated by Katy Siegel, which is in the midst of an international tour.
Books and DVDs related to artists in this show| Location | | | Gallery | Max Protetch | | Address | 511 W 22nd St New York (Chelsea) NY, 10011 United States | | Phone | 212-633-6999 | | Fax | 212-691-4342 | | Hours | Tue-Sat 10-6 | |
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