The Philadelphia Inquirer, March 9,1990
"Paintings Like, and Unlike Hopper's"
by Jennifer Crohn
Kurt
Solmssen's paintings at Marian Locks gallery look similar in spirit to
the work of Edward Hopper. Like Hopper,Solmssen is interested in the confluence
of architecture and landscape, where shadows have as much weight and presence
as objects. Both artists' figures appear as isolated characters in otherwise
unpopulated places.
But Solmssen's paintings are about twice
the size of Hopper's better- known works. and despite similarities in
the looseness of brushwork, generalization of shapes and overall composition
(compare Cold Storage Plant by Hopper to Solmssen's Indian Summer). Solmssen
doesn't paint the range of details that play through Hopper's paintings
like symphonic motifs. His pictures could be likened instead to big, bright
chords of color, assembled to give the impression that everything is at
rest. Despite the spacious emptiness they evoke, they are neither as romantic
nor as spooky as Hopper's paintings, which are more articulate about silence
than they are about stasis.
The understatement of mood in Solmssen's
work may, oddly enough, be a function of his choice of vibrant, high-key
colors. Many of those he uses are of nearly equivalent intensity: Yellow-green.
aqua, sky-blue and purplish ultramarine are set off against orangey browns
and reds. He makes little use of contrast between brightness and dullness.
Although his work is within the tradition
of East Coast realism, Solmssen's saturated, often synthetic looking color
and his depictions of late afternoons beneath a clear sky, open spaces
and broad, uncluttered interiors seem strongly influenced by a West Coast
sense of place.
Marian Locks, 1524 Walnut St. Hours: 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Tuesdays through Fridays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturdays. Through March 28.
Telephone: 5464-0322 |