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John |
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Dubrow |
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Two Masters of Color
John Dubrow (b. 1958) is a superb colorist, and his recent landscapes
at Lori Bookstein show off his gifts exceptionally well. The five large
paintings feature his familiar blocky—almost clunky—strokes,
applied with wide brushes and palette knives. But their eloquence lies
elsewhere. These scenes of city parks and streets all lend themselves
to his luminously weighted color, and the artist responds with a remarkable
eye for the integrating force of sunlight. Great diagonal swaths of color set up a panoramic drama in "View From Studio, Brooklyn" (2001-06). As always, Mr. Dubrow's colors don't simply indicate space; they make it palpable. A sunlit parking lot, warmed to an opaque terracotta-gray, turns cool and dense in shadow, and the dividing line between the two becomes a deep drive into space. Above it range orangey-pink tiers of sunlit factory walls, perforated by a single, placid blue: a glimpse of the East River. A lighter, vacuous blue fills the canvas's upper half as sky. Below it, all structures are bound to earth by the taut, insistent span of the Williamsburg Bridge. There are three park scenes in this exhibition. Modulated greens, punctuated
by the bright notes of figures, stream across the lower portions of each
painting. Behind, patches of denser greens rise as complex walls of foliage.
The small figures, little more than pale slabs, are irregular in shape
but startlingly specific in their disposition. Their measured hues—glowing
ochres, retiring light browns, neutral tan-yellows—succinctly size
up the gestures of sprawling, sitting, and propped on elbows. Such control would be oppressive were it iron-fisted, but Mr. Dubrow's improvisational rhythms and freely re-worked surfaces reflect a reliance on intuition rather than calculation. In fact, part of the appeal of these intensely knit paintings is their stylistic modesty; the artist seems to have no other interest than to uncover intuitive truths among bewildering stimuli. Their great reward is that the artist not only searches but finds, too. |
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© 2010 John Dubrow |
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