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Defining Style: The Paintings of Ronald Weintraub
Ross Neher
It is possible to define any style in art today
by appealing to Post-Impressionist archetypes. There is nothing
in contemporary art that cannot be traced to the work and influence
of either Cezanne, van Gogh, Gauguin or Seurat. Indeed, what has
been termed pluralism is little more than the mainstream's
acceptance of competing points of view that have their antecedents
in Post-Impressionism. Ronald Weintraub's painting is new to the
art-viewing public. A strict, stylistic analysis of his work in
relation to these known historical markers will provide insights
that a more casual approach may not disclose.
On first viewing, a large portion of Ronald Weintraub's
work can be described as Pointillist, relating the
work to Georges Seurat. The division of color into its constituent
hues and its reconstitution by means of an optical mix of tiny
dots of primary color was Seurat's attempt to refine the atomized
yet haphazard stroke of Monet, to make Impressionism scientific,
so to speak. With Seurat, we have the artist who plays the role
of the prototypical researcher at work in his studio/laboratory.
In analyzing Weintraub's work, note his use of the mark and its
relation to the ground. Even within this selective exhibition,
the facture is not uniform but is highly dependent upon scale.
The gamut of marks runs from the smallest of dots to ovoid shapes
roughly an inch long. The scale of the picture determines the
scale of the mark, with the smallest pictures consisting of dots
similar in size to those in a Seurat painting.
In a marvelous suite of pictures that take as their
inspiration charts used to detect color blindness, Pointillist
is an apt description of the technique Weintraub uses to create
them. These fourteen by eleven inch pictures have about them a
mechanical aspect that does indeed remind the viewer of Seurat
and his epigones. But is that comparison a valid stylistic assessment?
Only superficially, for the aloof and dispassionate manner of
Seurat is foreign to Weintraub's sensibility. The artist himself
insists that his paintings are not neat in the perfectionist's
sense and careful inspection reveals the undisguised mask of a
human hand. Nevertheless, even with this apparent, but significant,
conflict between method and intent, this group of pictures must
be judged a formal success. The color is particularly clear and
vibrant.
Stylistically then, the kinship with Pointillism
must be considered important only insofar as it conjures in the
mind a familiar pictorial trope. We must look further to determine
the source and meaning of Weintraub's style.
The predominant force in contemporary art is, without
a doubt, conceptualism. Marcel Duchamp's status as founding father
of Conceptual Art is well-known, but before Duchamp there were
Paul Gauguin and the Symbolists. Their preoccupation with signs
and referents and their general disregard for the sensate world
and its reproduction in paint have become commonplace in art nowadays.
The heirs to Gauguin and the Symbolists are numerous. They range
from Andy Warhol with his iconic images of celebrities, to Jasper
Johns with his targets and flags, to Joseph Kosuth with his dogmatically
conceptualist installations.
The will to image-making goes as far back as prehistoric
cave drawing. It is interesting to note that the images of animals
in prehistoric art were realistically rendered while those of
the figure were rendered in stick forms similar to those found
in children's drawings. We do not know why this is so but the
distinction between mimetic image and symbol appears at art's
very inception. In the series of small paintings cited above,
Weintraub embedded images, some organic, some geometric, but unlike
symbols, they do not allude to anything beyond themselves. Weintraub's
style owes nothing to Gauguin and the Symbolists.
The only figure who truly strove to continue the
concerns of Western painting was Paul Cezanne, who attempted to
make something solid of Impressionism. One can trace
Cezanne's influence through early Cubism, Mondrian, and certain
Abstract-Expressionist works, such as de Kooning's splendid Door
to the River. Of the painters working today, it is the realist
Racksaw Downes, with his disciplined technique and his Cezannesque
return to the familiar motifs, who most deserves to wear the mantle
of Cezanne. Either abstraction or representation may be conscripted
as a suitable vehicle for painting. Common to all of the above,
however, is the concretizing of sensation.
Even though Weintraub has painted figuratively,
representational painting is peripheral to his focus. His forms
lack the requisite solidity and instead have a sense of disembodiment
characteristic of retinal painting. Consciously or unconsciously,
Weintraub has rejected Cezannean influence.
By process of elimination, then, we are left with the expressionism
of Vincent van Gogh. Initially, Weintraub's work, with its more
rational demeanor, appears to be at odds with the intense emotionalism
associated with the Dutch artist. However, correspondences do
exist.
The hot colors, orange and red, have
been described as connoting such feelings as anger, rage and passion,
most likely because as advancing colors they appear
more aggressive than their cooler counterparts. Van Gogh put great
store in the notion that specific colors could elicit specific
emotional responses. He would often compose his pictures with
the spectator's emotional vocabulary in mind.
Ronald Weintraub has gravitated naturally to hot colors and to
orange in particular. During the mid-'90's, Weintraub completed
several predominantly orange paintings that were notable successful.
In this exhibit, a vertical painting with a bright orange-red
ground merits discussion. In a previous iteration, a form consisting
of red ellipses snaked diagonally down the painting from the top
left. Not satisfied with the prominence of the image, Weintraub,
in repainting the work, integrated the image with the surrounding
marks almost to the point of obliteration. This decision turns
out to have been most effective, in that a subliminal presence
contributes to the painting's mystery and power.
As stated earlier, the scale of the painting determines
the scale of the mark. Accordingly, the marks in this five by
four foot painting are not tiny dots but elongated ellipses that
resemble rice kernels in shape. What is of particular interest
is the manner in which they were painted. Unlike the dots in the
colorblind chart pictures, whole texture appears textureless and
crisp edged, these ellipses are actually brushstrokes of appreciable
material substance. Weintraub, here, betrays a certain impatience
in execution, so that the term expressionist is validly
descriptive. The simultaneously contrasting play of cool ellipses
on a warm field recalls Larry Poons's Colorfield paintings of
the 1960s. But whereas Poons plotted the location of his ellipses
according to a predetermined geometric pattern and painted them
with surgical precision, Weintraub strews his irregularly sized
and shaped ellipses according to the dictates of his intuition.
Much the way van Gogh borrowed Seurat's divisionist technique
in order to heighten the emotional impact of his painting, Weintraub
appropriates Poons's stylistic stratagems for his own emotive
purposes.
The other large, warm-hued painting in the exhibition
is the first in this series. It, too, is painted on a bright red
field. Here the marks are more indistinct and form clusters reminiscent
of iron filings in a magnetic field. In terms of facture, the
picture occupies a position between the work analyzed above and
the smaller, pointillist paintings. Ominous and brooding, the
painting seems about to erupt. As the generative painting to which
the others in the show owe their existence, metaphorically, it
does just that.
Weintraub has stated that he wishes his work to
express complex feelings and that he is opposed to a
bloodless, clinical look,' sentiments that affirm a stylistic
reading of Expressionism. He delights in giving his paintings
a "sense of dynamism" and "movement," important
qualities in Expressionist art. But deeply felt work need not
be overtly demonstrative; it can also exhibit measured restraint.
Any method of pictorial atomization such as the one Weintraub
employs will push the artist in the direction of allover patterning.
At he allover end of the spectrum is one of Weintraub's
most successful works. A horizontal painting measuring three by
four feet, it consists of a solitary, cool gray field. A top layer
has been added to neutralize a more aggressive ground. Small oval
shapes quietly nuzzle each other and play peek-a-boo with the
spectator. The gray field undulates softly and the picture projects
a reserved elegance evocative of Whistler. The emotionalism of
expressionism is held in check, but the painting is no less expressive
because of it. A painting of quiet repose, it is profound in its
simplicity.
Having traversed the formal terrain of Ronald Weintraub's
work, it is time to synthesize the findings. On the basis of both
the artist's statement and the physical evidence, the expressionist
impulse runs deep through Weintraub's art, though the immoderate
emotionalism characteristic of expressionist art is countered
by patterning devices that mute the unduly disruptive. The technical
requirements necessary to achieve a perfectionist's ideal in painting
(of the sort Seurat himself achieved) imply a mechanistic sensibility
at odds with a humanist ethos. One way allow for the pursuit of
technical perfection in smaller works where the intimate scale
enhances a jewel-like quality but in larger works such attention
to detail would seem overly restrictive and inhibiting. Freedom,
Weintraub seems to imply, is the consequence of enlarged boundaries.
That this exhibition of Ronald Weintraub's paintings
permits such rich and varied interpretation is a testament to
his seriousness and to the breadth of his endeavor. Far from being
formally circumscribed, Weintraub's work offers the viewer multiple
realizations, each affording its own particular pleasure.
Ross Neher is a painter and author of Blindfolding
the Muse: The Plight of Painting in the Age of Contemporary Art,
Prenom Press, New York, 1999.
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