Month: July 2011

Essay by Jane Buyers on Ram Samocha’s Metalpoint Series

From Scratch

Ram Samocha

 

The work of art is an ordered world of its own kind in which we are aware, at every

point, of its becoming.  Meyer Shapiro*

There is no way to make a drawing—there is only drawing.  Richard Serra**

Ram Samocha’s work has foregrounded drawing for a number of years—drawing of a very physical kind, prominently featuring a frenetic layering of lines that serves to trace a history of performative gestures over time. In fact he has also engaged quite literally in the act of drawing through physically demanding drawing performances.

Samocha has always freely experimented with a variety of materials, processes, media and forms of representation. In his latest body of work From Scratch, Samocha is exploring the medium of metalpoint, which may seem at first to be a surprising choice for an artist so focused on gesture. Using metal to inscribe lines is an ancient practice.  However, for most of us, if we have any knowledge of it at all, it is likely as a reference to a mysterious process from the early Renaissance known as silverpoint, associated mostly with artists engaged in very fine-lined, highly-detailed, labour-intensive work such as Albrecht Dürer . The decision to use such an out-moded technique is reminiscent of Jasper Johns’ resuscitation of encaustic. While it might at first seem eccentric and contrary, the resultant work shows that the choice is firmly based on the artist’s sense of his primary material interests and requirements. (more…)

R.M. Vaughan reviews Ilya’s Gefter’s suite of paintings in the Globe & Mail

Ilya Gefter, White Night, 2008

…Ilya Gefter’s suite of misty, achingly delicate paintings are a quiet respite.

Gefter’s crafty focus pulling/focus releasing causes the viewer to first seek out the solid, fully materialized objects being studied, and then to drift toward the liminal spaces, the backgrounds and sunsets, all underpainted veils of muted colour. Absence and presence, negative and positive space, are neatly, even obsessively, balanced, but Gefter’s works are not overly painterly or forced.

Sleight of hand rarely feels so honest.

R.M. VAUGHAN
“Ilya Gefter at Julie M. Gallery”
Globe & Mail, July 30, 2011