Portrait of the Artist: Molly Zuckerman-Hartung/Corbett vs. Dempsey
Although Molly Zuckerman-Hartung belongs to a younger generation than most of the painters that Corbett vs. Dempsey exhibits, her work has both the psychological depth and the resolute dedication to color that characterizes many of their artists. Zuckerman-Hartung’s sensibility emerges from a range of influences, from punk rock to French literature and Modernism. She describes her riot grrrl ethos as a sense “that you don’t have to know how to do something in order to do it,” so her work is an incendiary mix of raw desire and an admirably refined knowledge of painting.
The series of small, powerful paintings in the current solo exhibition—each one different and clashing with the one next to it—sets up the kind of “shocks” that filmmaker Sergei Eisenstein created using the technique of montage, exemplifying a very contemporary inchoate but still revolutionary fervor. Zuckerman-Hartung’s fragments of images, layers of color, marks of indecision and drifting shape-shifting forms are a catalog of compositional possibilities and rich references to the erotic vitality of paint, in contrast to some disappointingly literal images of porn. The artist and I talked for a while about an elusive sense of continuity among radical disjunctions of the evolving forms. It’s something powerful but hard to pin down that holds the work together at the same time as it flies apart.
Zuckerman-Hartung is as fluent with concepts as she is with pigment, explaining her aesthetics in terms of dialectics, syntagmas, subjectivity, accumulation over time and a fixation on mysterious sealed archives. She studied French literature at Evergreen College in Washington, but traveled and worked in bookstores before she pursued her MFA at SAIC, so she is able to hold a conversation on a literary and theoretical level without a trace of arrogance or condescension. Her excitement about the work and the process of painting is as generative and catching as if she were handing you a good book.
Her website gives a glimpse of her literary talents at the same time as it offers insight into her overall aesthetic. She sets up forms of order like the alphabet and then throws off the viewer with aleatory visual and textual elements, as if she is proposing a logical structure and then subverting it. She does have a secret past as a writer, an ardent fan of the sixteenth-century essayist Montaigne as well as Susan Sontag, having given up a possible career as a translator, seeking something in the process of painting, possibly what Adrianne Rich refers to as “relief” in “Planetarium,” a poem dedicated to the astronomer Caroline Herschel.“The relief of the body and the reconstruction of the mind” may be implicit in the process of what Zuckerman-Hartung called the “gestation” of a work. In any case, she contends that “Painting is a door, writing is a wall right now,” and others agree. She has just had a successful exhibition in New York and will have a solo exhibition at the MCA this spring. (Janina Ciezadlo)
Molly Zuckerman-Hartung shows at Corbett vs. Dempsey, 1120 N. Ashland Ave., through March 17, 2012.
http://art.newcity.com/2012/02/14/portrait-of-the-artist-molly-zuckerman-hartungcorbett-vs-dempsey/
Book Review posted: 4/5/20
The New Art Examiner
http://www.newartexaminer.org/walls-of-prophecy.html
March 2020
AICA (Association International Critiques des Artes, USA Division)
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