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Stanley Whitney Opening Saturday, March 12, 2005 from 6 to 8 p.m. Exhibition Dates: March 12 through April 16, 2005 For further
information or visuals please contact info@essogallery.com Hours: Tuesday through Saturday, 11 am - 6 pm |
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Jennifer Bacon and Filippo Fossati are pleased to announce the opening Saturday, March 12, 2005 from 6 to 8 p.m. of the first solo exhibition at Esso Gallery by American painter Stanley Whitney. (...)In 1991 Stanley Whitney
published a short book about his work, he included a statement
by poet Norma Cole which today looks like a farsighted and perfect
explanation of his past and future developments: "hesitation
becomes rhythmic assertions, a dance step into the recognizable
system of moves called the physical lyric. In its transgression
of its own system, each painting questions assumptions about
generalization... The paintings refer to one another participating
in an on-going conversation about color relations, drawings,
placement, illusion, volume, surface...in their own time." What is painting then? In the
book that I mentioned, Norma Cole referred to painting as a series
of operations. Now, there are obviously many ways of carrying
out these operations even without using canvas, brushes, and
so on. And yet Stanley Whitney uses both canvas and brushes;
a well defined, "closed" space, to tell us that his
means are specific to painting. Consequently, he withdraws on
tiptoe before the picture and instead of being an actor, he disappears,
retires into the wings. To say the word "painting"
implies a choice. Maybe that is precisely what makes Stanley
Whitney's work so different from others which appear similar.
Stanley Whitney once said that painting is discontinuous, that is not "deposited" according to his whishes, but rather acts in some special way to reveal his wishes differently from how he expected, with a sort of gap. Stanley Whitney tends, in his operations, to specify a fact; and the resulting intensity shuffles the cards in the pack. His canvases cut through the observer's horizon, imposing on him a reality which is both expected and unexpected, already realized and yet not realized. But maybe there is still a
simpler way of putting it, as in this quotation from Ernest Ansermet
(1948) "In the score, the performer will never find more
than an indication of the motive tensions which he must produce.
He must strive always to be beyond the mere notes, never actually
playing just what is written - also he must never play anything
which does conform to what is written." Extract from the essay by Teresio Ottavio Camenzio in Correspondences © Sanpierdarena Editori (GE) Italy 2005 Stanley Whitney was born in 1948 in Philadelphia,
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