The Trace Absence/ Presence- A Group Exhibition | Page 10

Inside Way Out by Augustus Goertz consists of a dark sphere in the lower left of the work, surrounded by an amalgamate of silver and grey. The entire painting has marking running over it and a rough built up mixed media surface, with small splashes of white paint that dot the piece’s landscape. The sphere feels much like an entryway into an unknown space—a portal into emptiness. The traces found elaborating the abstract structure of Inside Way Out tell us that the efforts of the artist himself are as important to us as the overall image we face. Mark-making cannot escape its existence as a visible activity, but at the same time it suggests an abyss surrounding it: the empty space we see in the areas not taken up with the residue of the tool- brush, pen, or pencil. Ford Crull, someone who has worked for years on developing an emotionally communicative, expressive line, offers a series of black-and-white drawings that are dense and complex exercises in a biomorphic abstraction sensibility that often form scrawled, fragmentary images that are in a constant state of flux, never beginning or ending. His gestural lyricism, close to poetry, emphasizes the high tradition of expressive abstraction here in New York, but it also fits into a general, geographically non-specific category of visual activity and its sometimes invisible consequences, as pronounced in the show’s introduction. The suite of images extends in meaning and power beyond each individual example. Peggy Cyphers’ luminous abstraction, The Labyrinth, shows us a group of parti- colored shapes, both rock-like and curvilinear in form, which appear to be floating in the dead darkness of outer space. This painting is conceptually based on the movements and turns of the Cretan labyrinth pattern dating back 2,500 years to Crete. The colors, luminous against the black background, owe their force both to the precise decisions made in the painting of the work, but also in the arrangement of the objects painted. Here, traces of form are sometimes overtaken by the dark depths of whatever is behind them. It is not exactly true that the imagery directly addresses this idea of a picture of remnant strokes and their environs. Rather, the specificity of the forms interact with inchoate space in a way that isolates the shapes, making them even more distinct in a black void they fill.