Click further along in the Clifford Smith Gallery's Web site for other highlights of this glossy, unabashedly gorgeous exhibition and see if you don't find yourself comparing the abstract images to other natural forms as well. One picture might make you think you're getting a close-up of one of those bubbles just after it's burst and has splattered on the glass mask of your Lloyd Bridges Seahunt suit. One might look like amoebae more beautiful than anything seen through a biology-lab microscope. Another may put you in mind of the pattern you'd see on leaning over the shady side of a canoe near the shore of a pond on a summer day (this may be stretching it) and staring at the overlapping lily pads until you fall into an hallucinatory state and lose your depth perception. If you fall overboard and down into the depths that the first painting took you to, it won't be your own reflection you're falling into, though. There are no narcissistic mirror images to sneak looks at in these "organic forms plasticized," as the site's promotional material puts it. It will be an illusion you're falling happily into. An artificial imitation of natural beauty.
Click down that Web page, I say, to the swirling vortex of putty-colored speckles that promises to pull you into the upper left-hand corner of the illusion if you manage to lose yourself to aesthetic beauty for a change and can surrender yourself to the delicious pale green background. Then down still farther for a look at Crest and Crest in Gunmetal, two mysteriously titled, meticulously dripped, and very prettily pigmented paintings. These stunning pieces have the kind of orderly disorder you're used to seeing in Jackson Pollack paintings. They aren't as busy as Pollack's action paintings. But like Pollack's they use a bold, monochromatic undercoat over which the dripping and droozling high-gloss paint has formed a somehow symmetrical pattern, a pattern not disproportionately tipped and lopsided this way or that but weighted on the surface with such naturally democratic care that your eyes and inner ear maintain their own balance. You're granted the serenity to float in defiance of tedium and gravity at the sight of such beauty.
I looked down at the Web siteand remembered the more recent time, one night in the woods in Maine, when I held a flashlight up very close to a beech tree and looked in amazement at the minute detail of the smooth bark that during the day looks as soft and gray (and as saggy and wrinkled around the boles and limb-joints) as a happy young elephant trumpeting for her mother. I realized (observed is more like it) that the plain gray bark which boastful lovers scratch their initials into really consists of adjacent, vertical, rectangular pixels of colorreds, greens and blacks, if I'm not mistaken; purples, limes, and charcoals, if I recall correctly. If you can regain your depth perception long enough to find your footing on the floor, try standing up now. The interconnected drips of Crest and Crest in Gunmetal look solid and thick enoughyou can pretend you're walking on the almost but not quite accidentally stunning pattern they make. Watching your step and proceeding one careful foot at a time, you can make your way across either picturewhichever colors turn you on most, the golds of Crest or the blues of Crest in Gunmetalwithout falling through to the fathomless depths. Then keep going. Float on past the edge of the picture's plane. Out the door for the walk to the train or the car. The vehicle you'll glide in ghostlike toward the gallery itself. Or just spread your wings and fly there.
Clifford Smith Gallery is on the Chinatown side of the South End, in a converted warehouse building next door to the Pine Street Inn, just a block inland from the Southeast Expressway, where the freight trains used to stop. The building, identified by a "Galleries at Thayer" banner, houses the Bernard Toale, the Kingston, and the Genovese-Sullivan, as well as the design, architecture, painting, photography, and candle-making studios of many individual artists. It's sparse, clean, quiet, and spacious, affording the kind of meditative looks you want to give this work.
With that reassuring revelation in mindthat there's more to this work than the beauty that met the World Wide Webbed eyeyou grow increasingly aware of the infinite variations of color and shape that Young could explore, and increasingly impressed that no matter what choices he makesof contrasting colors in background and foreground, or of gestural shape of drip, ribbon, blob, or speckle shapesit will turn out very prettily. Here's a delicious small piece, for instance, that offers smokey pink drips on dusky lilac background; here, a nice big one that sets pale green transparent ribbon and blob over shadowing gold opaque ribbon and blob over rich blue netting of some sort through which the even darker blue background appears. Here's a more monochromatic blue piece in the corner: a pale blue transparent surface of drips, slightly darker blue underlapping shadow shapes, and midnight blue undercoat with horizontal wave-pattern of corrugations. ("Oh!" you say, "I saw that on the Web site! That's unmistakably Crest in Gunmetal.") To say nothing of that one over therethe large piece against the farthest wall, so dominated by the transparent, pale-pink surface that it looks like shapes have been cut from the transparent acrylic cover to reveal the richer pink color beneaththe last one you look at before you go back to Polar and start over again.
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