Abstracting the World with dashes and X’s and V’s
by Alec Clayton
painting by Jeff Olson, courtesy Tacoma Community College
Olson’s paintings are all about the marks, thus the show title. But to my eye these marks are controlled and laid upon the canvas with a certain amount of deliberation — anything but rapid and energetic brushwork. To me, his brushstrokes look more like those of Robert and Sonya Delaunay and some of the early American abstractionists such Stuart Davis.
Despite questioning his claims about
the speed and exuberance with which he applies paint to canvas, I was impressed
with his paintings. They are joyful and colorful. Seeing groups of them
together with their slight variations on similar images is like walking through
a desert landscape with here and there a change in light and shadow or a
surprise outcropping of vegetation.
Olson’s show is a large exhibition
with a striking consistency of style. All the paintings are abstract
but evoking landscape.
Olson paints with short dashes and
X’s and V’s of color laid side-by-side on the canvas with no blending or overlapping.
Each brushstroke is self-contained; each color stands out clearly and
reverberates against its adjacent stroke. These marks are, in most instances,
lighter or darker values of the same color and are grouped together to form
shapes that read as hills or cliffs or clumps of bushes, or in some instances
forms that don’t so much look like anything in nature but which evoke the
feeling of being out of doors. Most of them have flat backgrounds that are seen
as sky or water and are of solid or almost solid colors that are loosely
brushed.
Behind the counter as you enter the
gallery are two large paintings of hills reflected in water, one in shades of
blue and the other in shades of yellow and gray. Other paintings that look like
hills, some with roads or rivers winding through them, are displayed in the
front part of the gallery. In the middle area groups of paintings with
brilliant, sun-lit forms are hung — one with a white shape like a funnel cloud
or a drill digging into an orange ground. Another in this area looks like a
torn curtain with yellow light shining through. The back section of the gallery
is filled with paintings in more muted tones with X’s and V’s forming shapes
like clumps of sticks — bales of spikey hay.
Jeff Olson: Making my Mark, 10a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday-Thursday, through
Aug. 9, Tacoma Community College, Building 5A, entrance off South 12th Street
between Pearl and Mildred, Tacoma, visitor parking in Lot G.
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