The Trace Absence/ Presence- A Group Exhibition | Page 13

This work might well be an elegy for classical culture, but its rendering is far from archaic. Here the sweep of paint is mostly used to determine atmosphere; the work belongs to the legacy of abstract-expressionism. Its organic structure mostly includes patches of paint, which fill the compositional field; as a result, the work is charged with presence, pushing absence—its usual concomitant—out of the way. Cyphers’ installation of Sol LeWitt’s Wall Drawing #461 (An 84-inch Square Filled in Loosely, Permitting White from the Wall to Show Through.) was originally shown in 1986 at the Ground Zero Gallery in East Village. Thin black lines move in all directions and cross over one another in a tightly packed manner directly on the wall. It is a marvelously expressive piece that owes its resonance to New York art practice. Even so, it is rather different from the often linear drawings and sculptures of LeWitt. But here is a work that is composed entirely of traces that seem to exist in a void, going nowhere even as they establish a zone of intricate relations. The marks are both self-sufficient in their visual implications and exemplary examples of the kinds of traces the exhibition is dedicated to illuminating. Finally, Northwest artist Mark Tobey’s print, Psaltery 1st Form, offers a marvelous tracery of short rounded lines closely interacting with each other, creating a dense nest of forms against a dark-brown background. It is beautiful— and perhaps even pious—without being decorative. Its presence is achieved by the elegance of the marks, which build structures that are intuitive rather than analytical. Here the trace is all important, implying an architecture raised against nullity: culture builds visible compositions in the face of emptiness, again a point suggested by the exhibition’s introduction. Art being what it is, we can only speculate on its decisions and effects. Still, both can be described with accuracy. Traces of the gesture in the show do in fact tie some of the works loosely to the New York School, which has now moved beyond three generations. This is likely inevitable, given the fact that the show is occurring in New York City, with many New York-based artists.