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For Immediate Release
Stanley
Whitney
Breathing
Sound
Exhibition Dates:
October 14, through November 11, 2006
opening reception:
Saturday October 14, 6 p.m. 8 p.m.
Catalogue available
Contact Information:
Natane Takeda, 212 560 9728 or info@essogallery.com
Hours: Tuesday through Saturday,
11 am - 6 pm
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"From one work to the
other one, the painter continues to address only one topic, which
is neither communicative nor expressive, because it doesn't claim
to communicate something from the outside nor to express something
that he has inside, however he makes a coherent speech in continuous
development. The world of the painter is made only of affirmative
statements, of an apparent inner calm. Certainly, to get to this
point, the painter had to exclude a lot, but it's the only way
to keep the things of which he can be sure - and they are very
few - and to be able to look at them with confidence and attraction.
At least for a moment, because the painter's eye is always ironic
and inquiring and his quiet statements are not other than silent
questions formulated with discretion, after which there is nothing
else to do but wait for answers that possibly will never come
and new questions that certainly will."
"Who writes admires the
painter's efforts to reach an absolute impersonality, an autonomy
of the work from the current conventions, escaping the hated
psychology, but starts to get irritated when he sees the road
toward impersonality brings the painter back again to the self,
being as well the Cartesian self, categorical, grammatical, anonymous.
But maybe this is the way to set the self free from the stout
heaviness of the personal autobiography. The painter creates
his own system of communication, a painting's inner code, a supporting
structure that the interpreter has to find and characterize,
an unknown foundation of rules that supports the organization
and the composition of his work."
"All of Stanley Whitney's
work takes off from the assumption that painting is a whole,
complete and definite, a building to which he doesn't pretend
to add anything. In a period in which it is easy to be an iconoclast,
he distinguishes himself for the respect that he brings to painting,
for the loyalty to the painter's profession in it's more humble
elements, for the unpretentiousness, and, together with the certainty
in which he lines up new works in the very narrow edge that remains
of a creative activity reduced to the analysis of itself."
"The fact that his own
work is not one but multiple worries the painter, it obliges
him to make new works that could contain the previous ones, that
could unify them and together would confirm them as distinct.
In the interval between one work and the next, time enters the
painter's work, time to which it is difficult to give a shape
that is not that of an autobiography. Each progressive work
points out a direction, a relationship of consequence and a pause
of detachment in the movement of the mind. His paintings, set
one after the other, become a story. They recount the story of
the painter thinking and making this work after the other one
and before the next one. Later the painter goes back to the canvas
from where he started; the geometrical squaring in a grid of
colors; the picture that contains all pictures."
"Stanley Whitney's painting
is the entirety at which nothing can be added and at the same
time the potentiality that implies everything that can be painted."
Filippo Fossati, excerpted
from Notes on Stanley Whitney's work, in 3 American
Painters, Cabuttaldi Editore, Bossolasco Italy 2006
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