Exploring Abstract Landscapes at B2 Fine Art
Published in the Weekly Volcano, June 23, 2016
"Autumn landscape Golden Grove,” painting by Gerard Collins, all photos courtesy B2 Fine Art Gallery |
For six years B2 Fine
Art Gallery has offered Tacoma a smorgasbord of art from emerging locals to
established international art stars. And now they offer up their final show
before packing up and moving north to the Emerald City.
The current show,
slightly misnamed an “exploration of abstract landscapes,” features Olympia
painters Jeffree Stewart and Becky Knold with some of their better works to
date, along with sculptures by Alan Newberg and paintings by Gerard Collins and
Nina Mikhailenko (I say “slightly misnamed” because some of the paintings are
not abstract in the least).
"Pond's Reflection" by Becky Knold |
Gallery owner
Gary Boone says nobody captures the Northwest light the way Knold does. I would
say nobody captures the blues of clear water the way she does in her paintings
“Pond’s Depth” and “Pond’s Reflection,” especially the former. Known for
minimalist abstracts with very few delineated forms on fields of layered color,
Knold shows more variety in this show than I’ve seen in any of her previous
shows. “Pond’s Depth” has marvelous areas of cool aqua blues and greens with
yellow accents and some surprising areas of flat, dull blue in three corners. I
like the unexpectedness of the dull blue corners and the way they highlight the
subtle changes in the rest of the painting. There is more complexity in “Pond’s
Reflection” than in her usual, and a nice faceted glass-like surface.
"Hidden Zone Lahare" by Jeffree Stewart |
Stewart’s
paintings come as a surprise to me. Although they show some similarities to
earlier works I have seen from him, they mostly represent new directions and
are the best of his paintings I have seen to date. They are stylized and highly
expressive landscapes painted with long strokes of intense color, often with
swirling spirals and sweeps like those seen in Van Gogh’s famous “Starry
Night.” There are two paintings in beeswax and gouache that are intense and
have an air of mystery to them. One of these pictures a silhouetted figure in a
boat in the ocean in front of a rocky shore. There is a lot of white in this
that sparkles like sunlight, but it is a cold, cold white light.
Mikhailenko’s
paintings are not abstract, but are traditional landscapes with softly blended
paint application and a welcoming glow of muted color. The best of these is a
painting of waterfalls that is like a blend of Monet and Whistler. Nicely done
but derivative.
Newberg’s
sculptures are imposing works in wood that exploit the natural properties of
the material to great effect. Two of them are freestanding sculptures that
stand seven or eight feet tall and have a monumental feel to them. A third is
much smaller but is equally monumental in concept if not in scale.
Collins, whom I
was told studied under the great Gerhard Richter, is showing a variety of
paintings, most of which are abstract but clearly based on nature, and two of
which are a Pollock-like overall pattern of black marks on white canvases. On
the far back wall is a Collins painting of tangled limbs in a dense forest
painted with overlapping staccato brushstrokes with a small band of sky showing
across the top. In this sky are white clouds that look like areas where the
canvas was left blank but which can be seen as painted upon a closer
inspection. This painting brings to mind the latest works by Olympia painter
Kathy Gore Fuss, but it has a rougher, rawer quality.
Tacoma will miss
B2.
The
Naturalist, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday-Saturday, till 9
p.m. Third Thursdays, through July 30, B2 Gallery, 711 St. Helens Avenue,
Tacoma, 253.238.5065.
.
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