{"id":8164,"date":"2018-07-18T17:00:09","date_gmt":"2018-07-18T17:00:09","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/thedorseypost.com\/?p=8164"},"modified":"2018-07-18T17:00:09","modified_gmt":"2018-07-18T17:00:09","slug":"no-ideas-but-in-things-2","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/thedorseypost.com\/?p=8164","title":{"rendered":"No ideas but in things"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"attachment_8166\" style=\"width: 489px\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-8166\" class=\" wp-image-8166\" src=\"https:\/\/thedorseypost.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2018\/07\/title-notes-1024x1024.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"479\" height=\"479\" srcset=\"https:\/\/thedorseypost.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2018\/07\/title-notes-1024x1024.jpg 1024w, https:\/\/thedorseypost.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2018\/07\/title-notes-150x150.jpg 150w, https:\/\/thedorseypost.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2018\/07\/title-notes-300x300.jpg 300w, https:\/\/thedorseypost.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2018\/07\/title-notes-768x768.jpg 768w, https:\/\/thedorseypost.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2018\/07\/title-notes.jpg 1296w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 479px) 100vw, 479px\" \/><p id=\"caption-attachment-8166\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Frederick Hammersley&#8217;s notes for possible titles<\/p><\/div>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 30px;\"><em>To live and work by inspiration you have to\u00a0stop thinking. \u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u2013Agnes Martin<\/em><\/p>\n<p>Frederick Hammersley was a sort of visual Taoist. Everything in his work seems to emerge out of a creative tension between polar opposites. Even his titles often depend on the polarities of a pun. If something in his work is pregnantly curved, it will be answered by razor-sharp angles elsewhere. In his organic images, the paint seems as irresistibly pure and fresh and new as tinted icing on a cake, yet it will be surrounded by a frame that looks salvaged and restored, as distressed as driftwood. These one-off, hand-crafted wooden frames\u2014the urge to run a fingertip across them was mighty strong when I saw his work in 2011\u2014are countered by the thin, low-profile lines of the floater frames that contain his geometric images. He worked on comparatively miniature canvases for the organic paintings and built the shadow box frames seemingly to bulk them up, and the frames work as yet another essential, polarizing element. They are almost prosthetic, a completion of the work, different from the way Howard Hodgkins integrated his frames with the work by making them a wider surface for his paint. With Hammersley, the frames are idiosyncratic, original, married to the painting rather than subordinate to it, making the painting a distinctly three-dimensional object, physical and situated in a particular place in front of the viewer\u2019s body, a fellow traveler through time, smiling with an unspoken individual history. The painting sits inside the shallow box, without seeming to touch it, at rest, at home.<\/p>\n<p>In these organic paintings, black and white wrestle as opposites often in their own tiny zip codes, yet they are segregated in such a way that their polarity is enveloped by the larger polarity between this opposing duo and the various peninsulas of luminous color around them. It\u2019s wheel within wheel of opposing elements, smaller polarities within larger ones.<\/p>\n<div id=\"attachment_8165\" style=\"width: 268px\" class=\"wp-caption alignleft\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-8165\" class=\"size-medium wp-image-8165\" src=\"https:\/\/thedorseypost.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2018\/07\/group-insurance-258x300.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"258\" height=\"300\" srcset=\"https:\/\/thedorseypost.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2018\/07\/group-insurance-258x300.jpg 258w, https:\/\/thedorseypost.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2018\/07\/group-insurance-768x892.jpg 768w, https:\/\/thedorseypost.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2018\/07\/group-insurance-882x1024.jpg 882w, https:\/\/thedorseypost.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2018\/07\/group-insurance.jpg 1038w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 258px) 100vw, 258px\" \/><p id=\"caption-attachment-8165\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Group Insurance, Frederick Hammersley<\/p><\/div>\n<p>Hammersley\u2019s organic shapes look anatomical and informal, hand-written, as if they could be cartoon X-rays of whatever is going on inside a Dr. Seuss figure. His lines feel as recognizable as a signature. The coloring book shapes allow him to juxtapose one pure color against another. The tones glow with delight, a calmly heightened response to the experience of seeing one spot of pure color next to another. They offer understated, captive ecstasies. Their color harmonies emerge gradually as you view them. The assertive, overconfident world of so much large-scale abstraction depends on its ambitious scale. Hammersley\u2019s luminously colored lobes huddle and fold into one another like vulnerable newborns on small canvases; they almost need their frames to get noticed.<\/p>\n<p>His geometric paintings are much larger, but not all <em>that<\/em> big. The work I saw at Ameringer McEnery Yohe (now Miles McEnergy) were square, ranging between three and four feet wide, small enough to fit on the wall of nearly any American house. As David Reed pointed out in the show\u2019s catalog, Hammersley\u2019s work was meant to be part of one\u2019s daily life, a domestic companion, not something to visit on \u201chigh art occasions.\u201d The structure of his geometries seem like an entirely dispassionate pursuit, like <!--moreMORE-->a multiplication table, a methodical working through of every possible recombination of variables, every last way to assemble a rectangle, triangle and parallelogram within a square. Yet even these angular images don\u2019t feel impersonal or cold. Their amiable simplicity is what\u2019s most striking. Often he worked in black and white, and rarely relied on more than three or four tones, keeping his paintings as minimal as they could get. And yet when he did venture into color in the geometric compositions, it was usually a lyrical departure into lilac, taupe, peach, or a muted green.<\/p>\n<p>The work these paintings do is entirely perceptual. There\u2019s nothing to decipher. Yet, against my better judgment, I\u2019ve been lured back to my catalog of Hammersley\u2019s work recently <em>because<\/em> of their coy, elusive titles. This troubles me. Normally, I hate titles and the way they offer a foothold for intellectualizing a painting. Conventions notwithstanding, a date would suffice. With plenty of notable exceptions, titles usually strike me mostly as an artifact handy for taking inventory. Even <em>Guernica<\/em> would have been just as well served by its title if any other town had been attacked\u2014a different place-name wouldn\u2019t have diminished the painting\u2019s shrieking protest, and <em>Untitled<\/em> might have conveyed an appropriate speechlessness. With a host of exceptions, the names of paintings are like the names of people\u2014you need them mostly to talk about them or add them to somebody\u2019s list. Yet Hammersley\u2019s titles are both playfully irrelevant to the silent work his paintings are actually doing, and\u2014like those weathered frames\u2014a way of situating the work for the idle pleasure of musing about it. The question, as always for me, is whether or not thinking about a painting matters at all\u2014since, for me, painting (like music) does it\u2019s most essential work immediately, before any thought about it can get in the way.<\/p>\n<p>I\u2019ve been leading myself down this garden path this summer, though\u2014against my better judgment\u2014and I\u2019m two thirds of the way through for a triad of paintings where naming the work will offer more ideas than my typically pedestrian titles do\u2014and so I\u2019m going back to Hammersley to reassure myself about this. When I did my first painting of paired jelly beans and bullet casings, I was looking for a way to combine soft and colorful objects with something hard and shining. It occurred to me that a Jelly Belly might fit into a bullet casing as a whimsical substitute for a lead slug. The idea made me uncomfortable because it felt like a facile metaphor, like a distant nod to the famous photograph of the protestor who inserted a carnation into the barrel of an MP\u2019s rifle during the Vietnam era. I have no passion about guns nor about controlling their ownership. Gun owners should be allowed to own whatever they want, under the law, knowing that they\u2019ll likely never need to fire them. Gun control is virtually pointless. With millions of weapons already out there, you can\u2019t, as they say, put the genie back in the bottle. All the guns anyone will ever need are privately owned already and will never be seized unless we end up living in a completely different country. If the nation wants to ban particular semi-automatic rifles, we should do it, but it won\u2019t change the culture nor really stem much violence. If bullets made of sugar are social commentary, it\u2019s my wry, impertinent version of it. The problem is not in our Ninja stars, but in ourselves.<\/p>\n<div id=\"attachment_8168\" style=\"width: 308px\" class=\"wp-caption alignright\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-8168\" class=\"size-medium wp-image-8168\" src=\"https:\/\/thedorseypost.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2018\/07\/jelly-bean-bullets-298x300.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"298\" height=\"300\" srcset=\"https:\/\/thedorseypost.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2018\/07\/jelly-bean-bullets-298x300.jpg 298w, https:\/\/thedorseypost.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2018\/07\/jelly-bean-bullets-150x150.jpg 150w, https:\/\/thedorseypost.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2018\/07\/jelly-bean-bullets-768x774.jpg 768w, https:\/\/thedorseypost.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2018\/07\/jelly-bean-bullets-1016x1024.jpg 1016w, https:\/\/thedorseypost.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2018\/07\/jelly-bean-bullets.jpg 1767w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 298px) 100vw, 298px\" \/><p id=\"caption-attachment-8168\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Jelly beans\/bullet casings<\/p><\/div>\n<p>None of this has anything to do with why I painted the image. Jelly beans and bullet casings seem to belong together as polarized formal elements, visually, regardless of whether or not they form a coherent or unambiguous assertion about anything at all. Yet it\u2019s hard not to think about what they can be construed to mean, though\u2014and that makes it doubly hard to resist the urge to make the painting. The title arrives after the image, and in this case it has involved weeks of musing, weighing alternatives, finding the lightest touch possible and then discovering a way to tie things together. It took me more than two months to come up with a title for my second painting of bullet casings with jelly beans, mostly because I had nothing in particular that I wanted the painting to convey, intellectually. The temptation is to draw from my own long-standing or current preoccupations, though, and this is what I\u2019ve ended up doing.<\/p>\n<p>For the small series it belongs to, a subset of the jars I\u2019ve done over the past decade, I\u2019ve wanted to do three of them containing something other than jelly beans or M&amp;Ms or Chiclets, and so I\u2019ve been on the alert for objects that are roughly the same size as something small and edible, with some kind of distinctive sheen\u2014if not as colorful as candy, then something metallic. The motivation to do the first candy jar arose as a response to my love for color field painting and abstraction in general. I wanted to find a way to stick to still life painting\u2014technically the jar paintings are a single object placed on a flat surface containing multiple repetitive parts\u2014but at the same time I wanted to build the image out of nearly uniform areas of color, pieced together to form a pattern that extends across nearly all of the canvas. Color was the primary motivation. Thiebaud, Mattiasdottir, Matisse, Porter, Morandi, and especially Janet Fish used a personalized palette to make color nearly an end in itself in their versions of a still life. Without taking overly painterly liberties with what I saw, I wanted to find a way to do something similar, to use color to create a persuasively real image that also has qualities of an abstract pattern. I enlarged the jar and presented it so that it nearly fills the entire canvas, pushing everything it contains forward toward the viewer so that it seems to be hovering at the flat surface of the canvas. The image toggles back and forth between representation and abstraction, and the fact that the same but slightly different set of objects is clustered so tightly together in a repetitive pattern hints at all-over abstraction.<\/p>\n<p>With one jar of candy after another, using color and shape to explore variations on the same basic structure, I had little interest in doing more than numbering the individual paintings according to the order in which I\u2019d painted them. But with my first departure into something other than sweets\u2014the first painting I did using diaper pins a few years ago\u2014I recognized the opportunity to venture elsewhere with the titles. A friend, Sheri Colao, had suggested the subject when I was visiting her and her husband Brian, in Pompton Lakes. Until then, I\u2019d had no idea these colorful pins even existed. But I liked the idea, found them on the Internet, and ordered enough for the project. At the time I had planned to paint two different images containing the diaper pins\u2014one jar full of open pins and one full of them safely closed. After finishing the first of the pair, I began to free associate in order to come up with a title and the fact that the pins were all open and jabbing toward one another in a seemingly disordered jumble suggested the perils of an unrestrained, impulsive, or rebellious life. (Or, maybe, social media?) Hence, <em>Cutting Loose and Breaking Free<\/em>. So I ended up with a conceptual label for an image that grew out of nothing more than a craving for certain formal qualities in the image. As counterpoint to that first painting, the smaller companion in this current series of jars will be named <em>Reticence<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>For the second coupling of jelly beans and bullet casings, I\u2019ve drawn from my recent reading of Tolstoy\u2019s Anna Karenina and his later non-fiction inspired by his code for civil disobedience and, at least for now, I settled on <em>Resist Not<\/em>, shortened from <em>Resist Not Evil<\/em>, though the first canvas ended up with the slightly ironic title that seems too obvious: <em>Gun Control<\/em>. The new title suggests that maybe both gun owners and gun opponents might find a better approach by refusing to fire back at their opposition, intensifying an anger that simply spurs further polarization. Yet I find nothing in this issue very compelling. I grew up borrowing a friend\u2019s .22 rifle and shooting targets at a range\u2014it was a fun, coming-of-age ritual. Guns are a part of life. But Tolstoy was right: the more you fight your opponent, the more he fights back. Imagining a gun that merely stuns, or dispenses candy, might suggest a form of non-violent resistance\u2014or no resistance at all, which was the original advice. \u201cResist not evil\u201d is an admonition adopted first by Tolstoy and then by Gandhi and Martin Luther King Jr., who both scaled the Russian\u2019s advice into social change<\/p>\n<p>And on it goes, as my thinking mind improvises on an image that wasn\u2019t inspired by any of these considerations.<\/p>\n<p>I\u2019ve played all sorts of interpretive games this way, as Hammersley did when he playfully improvised on his tones to puzzle out his titles. In fact, the past couple days, I was thinking of mottos or guidelines that come in threes, trying them out, but none of them really fit. Silence, exile, and cunning. No. Hope, faith, and charity. Not really. Waking, dreaming, deep sleep. Life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. Paper, rock, scissors. Moe, Larry and Curly. Still thinking of Tolstoy, I even looked up lists of monastic vows, of all things, and found one that actually almost applies: chastity (restraint), poverty and obedience. What three admonitions could be a larger repudiation of current Western culture? I could almost twist those notions to fit, but it would be a stretch. But the point is that none of this <em>ex post facto<\/em> significance motivated me to make the paintings, the third of which should be finished by the end of August. My interest is working with formal characteristics, smuggling certain kinds of color into a painting, and letting the integrity of the image generate it\u2019s own ideas, or none at all. Bypassing the discursive brain is how most or all of a great painting\u2019s work gets done.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>To live and work by inspiration you have to\u00a0stop thinking. \u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u2013Agnes Martin Frederick Hammersley was a sort of visual Taoist. Everything in his work seems to emerge out of a creative tension between polar opposites. Even his titles often depend on the polarities of a pun. If something in his work is pregnantly curved, it [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-8164","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-uncategorized"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.5 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>No ideas but in things - represent<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/thedorseypost.com\/?p=8164\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"No ideas but in things - represent\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"To live and work by inspiration you have to\u00a0stop thinking. \u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u2013Agnes Martin Frederick Hammersley was a sort of visual Taoist. Everything in his work seems to emerge out of a creative tension between polar opposites. Even his titles often depend on the polarities of a pun. 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I've authored two books and also work as a ghostwriter. I sell my work through Oxford Gallery, and have exhibited around the U.S. and internationally.\",\"sameAs\":[\"http:\\\/\\\/www.daviddorsey.com\"],\"url\":\"https:\\\/\\\/thedorseypost.com\\\/?author=1\"}]}<\/script>\n<!-- \/ Yoast SEO plugin. -->","yoast_head_json":{"title":"No ideas but in things - represent","robots":{"index":"index","follow":"follow","max-snippet":"max-snippet:-1","max-image-preview":"max-image-preview:large","max-video-preview":"max-video-preview:-1"},"canonical":"https:\/\/thedorseypost.com\/?p=8164","og_locale":"en_US","og_type":"article","og_title":"No ideas but in things - represent","og_description":"To live and work by inspiration you have to\u00a0stop thinking. \u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u2013Agnes Martin Frederick Hammersley was a sort of visual Taoist. Everything in his work seems to emerge out of a creative tension between polar opposites. Even his titles often depend on the polarities of a pun. 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