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Successor Succeeds at Painting Air
05/09/2012

Finch invited seven RISD students to assist in the process of painting the geometric and highly precise grid of colors in Painting Air, executed over a two-week period.
It started as a dare. In 1988 Spencer Finch MFA 89 SC and his friend and fellow classmate, contemporary
artist Paul Ramirez Jonas MFA 89 SC,
were roaming the galleries of the RISD Museum, debating the social significance
of Impressionism. Immersed in Marxist criticism, Finch was
convinced that Impressionist paintings were worthless, serving up nothing but
decadent bourgeois ideals.
So Jonas challenged him to try making one.
“[Paul] dared me to copy the Monet painting The Basin at Argenteuil,” Finch says. “I thought it would be easy,
but it wasn’t.”
Finch
told this story when speaking with Judith
Tannenbaum, Richard Brown Baker Curator of Contemporary Art at the Museum,
in preparation for his solo show, Painting
Air: Spencer Finch, which continues through July 29. The two-part exhibition,
featuring his work as both an artist and curator, includes his attempted copies
of the Impressionist masterpiece along with the original from 1874, which is
part of the museum’s permanent collection.
As
it turns out, the act of replicating Monet’s study of atmospheric effects and
natural light proved to be a turning point in Finch’s trajectory as an artist.
A century after the Impressionist master famously said, “I want to paint the
air . . . and that is nothing short of impossible,” Finch began to share that same
obsession.
However,
his own fixation with color and light has taken on myriad forms, from drawing
and watercolor to photography, video, installations and sculpture. Now, with Painting Air, Finch has come full circle
in more ways than one: He is exhibiting in the very venue where he took on that
pivotal dare, and with a major site-specific installation at the core of the
show, he has created a world of painted squares and hanging glass—inspired by
his 2011 visit to Monet’s water garden in Giverny, France – that speaks to the
power of creative influence, the complexity of optical phenomena in nature and
the artistic drive to give form to what is inherently intangible.
“The work really creates an environment, a
space that changes and that people seem to want to spend time in,” Tannenbaum
says of the installation of more than 100 transparent, highly reflective glass
panels suspended across a 150-linear-foot-long mural of square shapes painted
in 34 different colors. As the glass panels sway, they reflect both the colored
rectangles and any movements in the gallery, perpetually shifting viewers’
perspectives.
“It’s a physical experience and a visual
experience,” says Tannenbaum. “It’s not about seeing an object, it’s about
being in a particular space.”
For the curatorial component of the
exhibition, Finch dove into the Museum’s storage areas to pluck selections from
the permanent collection that really speak to him, from works by 19th-century
portrait artist John Singer Sargent to
Expressionist painter Egon Schiele to contemporary multimedia
artist Bruce Nauman.
“I’ve been thinking about the
galleries being the conscious part of the Museum and storage being the
unconscious part,” Finch says. “These weird things that pop out of storage
aren’t as controllable as what’s on view, but we rarely get to see them.”
Having once dismissed the entire
Impressionist movement, Finch now openly embraces Monet as one of his most
enduring influences. “Monet’s work… was about this idea of trying to capture
some thing—a place, a moment, an impression, a light condition—and repeatedly
returning to it to get closer to its essence, while at the same time admitting
the impossibility of doing so,” Finch says. “That impossibility is interesting
to me—the impossibility of representation, the impossibility of communication,
the impossibility of making art, to a certain degree.”
related links:
Painting Air: Spencer Finch at the RISD Museum
Artforum Critics' Pick
Spencer Finch aims to unite a master’s eye with high jinks (Boston Globe)
tags: alumni,
graduate,
RISD Museum,
Painting,
Sculpture