Only a
recent fan of Clare Rojas’ work, I first came across her talent while working
as a gallery assistant to Shepard Fairey this past summer at “Art Alliance: The
Provocateurs” pop-up show held in Chicago.
Having an art history background, a bachelors degree in fine art and an
eye for retro sixties abstraction, Clare Rojas’ pieces resonated the most with
me out of the forty-some artists exhibiting in the show.
World famous contemporary artists such as Keith Harring were
among the artists being shown, a diverse group from Fairey himself and rising
star Cleon Peterson to wheat paste and paper artists such as the talented Swoon
and rock star, artist singer and guitarist of Rancid and The Transplants, Tim
Armstrong, many of which I had the pleasure of meeting during the five-day long
art show.
Above are images from Art Alliance, the first of Clare Rojas' work and the second of myself in front of Shepard Fairey's work.
Shepard of course curated the show
and I was responsible for gallery sales and general up-keep of the show, which
led to research on many of the individual artists and collaborators. This is
where my infatuation with Rojas’ work first began. Being that I came across Rojas later in her
career, I was first exposed to a painting in the show that acted as pure
geometric abstraction using flat geometric shapes and a limited color palette.
I have since had the chance to see Roajs’ work exhibited at Kavi Gupta Gallery
located in the heart of Chicago’s West Loop art community. Her recent art
strongly resembles the works of Ellsworth Kelly, an American artist known for
his hard-edge painting style and simplicity of form. Rojas uses instinct and observation of forms
in nature to inspire her painting style that features shapes floating in
space. Flat forms and space are
referenced in the title of her solo show “Everyone Has Those Spaces.”
|
©Clare Rojas All Rights Reserved |
|
©Clare Rojas All Rights Reserved |
I welcome Clare Rojas’ recent
return to abstraction on account of its sheer aesthetic appeal. Still referencing both traditional female
roles as well as geometric shapes that bare resemblance to the craft of
quilting, Clare’s paintings have a link to fiber and material traditions in
addition to appearing in likeness to modernist paintings. These patterned motifs are far from
accidental, as Rojas has immersed herself in contemporary and cultural studies
on women and their traditional roles in society. In the past Rojas’ works reflect this examination
on the female’s subordinate roles and often portrays it’s opposite through
narrative. This body of work differs in that it is about purely visual aspects
of style and form. The pieces are as
much about color as they are about line and composition. Moving away from female iconography, this
work is more visceral than it is intellectual.
|
©Clare Rojas All Rights Reserved (example of past works) |
Her abandonment of heavy social
context puts her in a direction that celebrates Modernist properties expressive
through color and form. Clare explains
that working with abstraction, shape and color have become a way of seeing in
terms of feeling rather than intellectualizing.
For her, this transition can be described as a way of getting out of her
head and into her body, where the work becomes instinctual rather than
premeditated and carefully researched. Her work is captivating as a geometric
abstractionist, exploring color theory and color extension and the roles sharp,
clean and round edges can play in the reading of her art.
|
©Clare Rojas All Rights Reserved |
There is excitement that can be
derived from Rojas’reduced color palette, especially when opting to express
ideas through saturated primary colors.
Playing with hot and cool colors of equal color intensity and pairings
of complementary colors, Rojas is able to express seemingly complex ideas that
are ultimately primal. Rojas knows how to cause tension in her abstract works
as with dissonance in music, or the relief of a minor chord giving way to
major. Instinctually, she orchestrates the way planes of color can be read
exemplifying the importance of perception in terms of art. Motifs of sharp and round edges allow the
viewer to react to visual cues rather than reading into historic or cultural
context. This work provokes emotion from the viewer, reminding us of the
importance shape and color play in a body of work whether planes of color are
touching, colliding or floating in space.
|
©Clare Rojas All Rights Reserved |
|
©Clare Rojas All Rights Reserved |
Darryll Schiff is also known for
his brilliant use of color extension in photography. His photographic works are a beautiful,
unexpected interaction of color. Though
most of Darryll’s published works are representational pieces, he does have an
exciting new series in the works, titled “Quintessence.” This new series is entirely abstract with a
focus on light and color. Some areas are
denser with light than others, creating a dispersion of depth and motion one
might expect given the title and it’s reference to both a cosmic force and the
purest form of energy. Even with Darryll’s representational works, you can see
he takes spatial relationships into great consideration when composing an
image. Darryll has tight control over
what recedes visually and what comes forward in his color palette; this is in
part what makes a masterful composition.
Contrast of extension is all about proportion; this is why Darryll’s work
has such a strong noticeable balance. In
other instances, Darryll intentionally makes one color more active than the
others as a contrast to draw emphasis on important areas of the image that hold
significance to the message of the piece.
|
©Darryll Schiff All Rights Reserved |
|
©Clare Rojas All Rights Reserved |
The instinctual color knowledge
both Clare and Darryll possess goes beyond design elements, it is integral to
the work they create. The use of color
greatly impacts the message of their compositions. Emotions are generated largely based upon
balance of equivalence or disproportionality in a work of art. In some of my favorite works composed by
Darryll, I find myself drawn to cool color schemes with washes of bright color
and light. This technique is applied
throughout Darryll’s famed “To Heaven” series. It is especially compelling to look at side by side comparisons from this series to see his inversion techniques. Similarly, Rojas has paintings from the same series of work that seem to invert areas of space and form.
|
©Darryll Schiff All Rights Reserved |
|
©Darryll Schiff All Rights Reserved |
|
©Clare Rojas All Rights Reserved |
|
©Clare Rojas All Rights Reserved |
Stay tuned for a future post covering Darryll's exciting feature in one of Spain's leading magazines! Accompanying this post Darryll and I will relay his passion for Spain as a great source of inspiration for his art. Until next time - Lauren Ike
No comments:
Post a Comment