Review of Kurt Solmssen at Foster-White Gallery,
Pioneer Square Gary Faigin Broadcast October 2003, on NPR station
Kuow Seattle
Intro:
The art of the century just past was dominated
by expressions of inner struggle and challenges to the established
visual order. In a quieter mode, some painters like the Swedish
artist Carl Larson and the American Fairfield Porter, focused instead
on the business of everyday life, creating an idealized record of
their immediate household amidst its surroundings. In a similar
spirit, local resident Kurt Solmssen has for many years devoted
his painting attention to his family and his environment - the remote
Puget Sound hamlet of Vaughn. Solmssen's latest show has just opened
at the Foster-White Gallery in Pioneer Square. Here with our review
is Gary Faigin.
There is a fascinating animated sequence
on the opening page of Kurt Solmssen's website, where a photo of
a shoreline vista slowly dissolves into the vibrant painted version
of the same scene. What's the difference? The focal point of the
view, a handsome, gabled house nestled in trees and shrubbery, has
been drastically ratcheted up in color, but is otherwise unaltered.
The scruffy foreground of assorted plants, debris, and pockmarked
sand has been simplified into bold, almost abstract shapes, .a Solmssen
specialty.
But the most striking thing of all is what
happens to the other houses visible in the photograph. Like so many
of us, Solmssen would prefer his Puget Sound waterfront without
its dense patches of suburbia. In his painted version of the locale,
the rest of the shoreline has been returned to nature, whole clusters
of houses replaced with evergreens and autumnal brush.
Though a realist, Kurt Solmssen does not
so much record what he sees, as use his surroundings as a point
of departure for poetic homages to waterside life, the delights
of color and light, and the joys of the loaded brush. His paintings
are rich, fluid, and celebratory. Obtrusive elements - either human
or natural - are kept out of the frame of view, or like those beachfront
homes, edited away. The family activities are always calm and genial,
the weather generally, though not always, sunny.
What distinguishes these paintings is not
so much the subject matter as
the sophistication of their pictorial language. In the very large
painting The Yellow Boat, for example, we hover two dozen feet above
a young man sitting on a set of concrete stairs leading from a closely
cropped lawn down to the water's edge, beyond which floats a wooden
dinghy. The geometry is as severe as the color is lush. The picture
is divided nearly precisely in two by a corner to corner diagonal,
the boundary between land and water, green and blue. A boxlike hedge,
its edges squared off like a wall, frames the warm grey box of the
stairwell, its right angles contrasted with a round tabletop alongside.
The blankness of the green gray lawn is broken only by a precisely
bounded grey triangle of clothing.
In counterpoint to this strict geometry are contained areas of vigorous
brushwork. The squared-off hedge, for instance, is built up with
slightly messy, calligraphic, strokes of warm and cool. The seemingly
flat lawn vibrates with a similar quilt of closely harmonized strokes.
The faceless figure, his bathing suit sporting the same Kelly green
as the hedge, acts as foil to the real subject of the picture -
the electric yellow rowboat, framed by deep blue and hovering above
its own shadow, an ode to the almost alarming clarity. of high summer
in the Northwest.
By way of contrast, the picture Puget Sound
Green and Grey memorably evokes the chill, water-logged atmosphere
of those many days. when the sun does not shine. A pale and vaporous
lawn slopes down to a nearby shore, where washed-out sea and sky
are separated only by a tiny grey band. Groves of nearly colorless
trees on the left frame the view, becoming more melting and translucent
as they move into the distance. Here the counterpoint is not a blaze
of color, but a row of calligraphy
- the beautifully depicted, highly acrobatic fruit trees that are
the one distinct, lively element in a world gone fuzzy and grey.
One thinks here of Whistler, also a fan of Chinese brush painting
and the use of ever-so-subtle tonalities.
Solmssen also shares with Whistler - many
generations later - the belief in art for art's sake, art freed
of the polemical, the theoretical, and the didactic, art responsive
to the world of visual appearances. and the
creation of pleasure. In this day and age of mad bombers and musclemen
governors, it is an undertaking not without a certain appeal.
I'm Gary Faigin.
Extro:
The paintings of Kurt Solmssen will be on
display at Foster-White Gallery in Pioneer Square through Sunday,
October 26. Kurt Solmssen's personal website is kurtsolmssen.com.
Artist, author, and critic Gary Faigin is co-founder and Artistic
Director of the Seattle Academy of Fine Art.
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