I enjoyed the show more than I had expected. Several of the Joseph Beuys prints (shown above, one of four from portfolio, “L’arte et une zanzara dalle mille ali,” or Art is a Mosquito on a Thousand Wings) for example, brought to mind Mark Lombardi’s obsessed flow charts of evil-doing and corruption.
Burko’s fire-and-ice iris prints of a volcano, wreathed in voluptuous smoke, and a chilly Iceland iceberg (shown above left, “Over Vatnajokull in July #2”), both taken from above, brought the snow into perspective as a mere annoyance from nature. A longtime painter of nature’s grandeur based on aerial photos, Burko, over the past two years has been mining the photos for prints, made in collaboration with Silicon Gallery. They have a sobering elegance.
Andrade’s “Silver Turn” screenprint (shown above right) performs a nice op-art trick of appearing soft, despite the precise, hard edges.
And while I’m talking about the women in the show, I’ll add Elizabeth Murray’s labor-intensive “Shack,” (shown left) a sort of 3-D collaged lithograph that crackles with cartoony humor. You would need to clear out a large wall in your house to hold this one, the show’s largest piece, at 63 x 51 inches.
But now I get to my very favorite, for which I could not get a decent image. It was Jasper Johns’ “Light Bulb,” a light-sucking low relief in lead. Flat out funny. In my photo it looked like a plain slab of black.
Shop local, shop artists this holiday season, a short list
Memento Mori, A trip through skulls, Sotheby’s, shot glasses and soap
The quintessence of collaboration – Damon Kowarsky and Atif Khan in Hybrid at Twelve Gates Arts