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TIME: Almanac 1995
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<text id=93TT1027>
<title>
Mar. 01, 1993: Signs Of Anxiety
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Mar. 01, 1993 You Say You Want a Revolution...
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
ART, Page 60
Signs Of Anxiety
</hdr>
<body>
<p>In a retrospective, American artist Susan Rothenberg emerges
from the '80s as a painter of mystery, originality and real
staying power
</p>
<p>By ROBERT HUGHES
</p>
<p> Various American painters rode to fame in the 1980s, and the
shake-out that is going on in the wake of that binge has been
hard on most of them. Not on Susan Rothenberg, however. Her
present retrospective of paintings and drawings, 20 years'
worth of work--it was organized by curator Michael Auping
for the Albright-Knox Art Gallery in Buffalo, New York, and
is now at the Hirshhorn Museum in Washington--only confirms
one's impression of the nerviness, durability and occasional
brilliance of her development, and of the psychological integrity
behind the twists and turns of her style.
</p>
<p> Rothenberg first became noticed in New York in the mid-1970s,
with a series of paintings that depicted--of all things--horses. Despite her other merits, she is no George Stubbs, and
her horses were of a generic cast, crude silhouettes with a
certain amount of texture and internal patterning but no modeling,
with heads like wombats' and hooves of clay. The surprise that
they occasioned at the time came less from their fidelity to
the equine form than from the fact that they were there on canvas
at all.
</p>
<p> Rothenberg did her first horse, a pallid and watery sketch,
in 1973, and it is hard nowadays to remember what an unyielding
prejudice against any kind of hand-painted figuration existed
in New York 20 years ago. Abstract art--in particular its
last whole-cloth style, Minimalism--had done away with all
that. It had also shaped artists' expectations about format:
split and abutted canvases, "primary" X shapes, the whole pictorial
rhetoric of the canvas as object.
</p>
<p> And then, awkwardly and unexpectedly, with Rothenberg's gee-gees
leading the field, figures started recolonizing the bare stage.
Partly they did so in response to performance art, which had
absorbed the body images that abstraction had driven out of
painting. (Trained as a dancer, Rothenberg tried performance
herself in the early '70s.) Partly it was just out of inarticulate
need--the need to reconnect with the world, through self-description
that didn't exclude pathos. Auping is certainly right in seeing
the horses as disguised self-portraits, or at any rate as "presences"
that stood in for human presence.
</p>
<p> The horse images were embedded in a lush, forceful and nuanced
paint surface that--as in Cabin Fever, 1976--could be very
handsome indeed. They included Minimalist signs, X's and quarterings,
which made them seem more heraldic than natural. (Though the
vertical split line that bisects Cabin Fever might be read as
the finish post at the end of a horse race, it's probably just
a relic of Minimalist style.) The opposites didn't amalgamate
well. As Rothenberg herself put it, "My formalist side was denying
my content side." And so "I began tearing it [the horse] apart
to find out what it meant."
</p>
<p> Literally "tearing it apart." Rothenberg's paintings over the
next few years were all about dismemberment, blockage and fright.
She is one of the younger artists who took heart from Philip
Guston: in the early '70s, Guston, an abstract painter for years,
had returned to the figure with a controversial set of seriocomic
paintings of Ku Klux Klansmen, which laid the ground for his
formidable "late" style and often featured stray boots, feet
and arms.
</p>
<p> In the same spirit, but without the levity, Rothenberg started
butchering her horse image: haunches, fetlocks and heads scattered
on the ground of the canvas, with no gore but a lot of implied
anxiety. Most of them started from small doodles, envelope-size,
and the large paintings retain the cryptic and improvised look
of drawings; in fact, since so much of Rothenberg's work is
about linear figure and ground, it is hard to say where drawing
leaves off and painting begins: for her, a drawing is something
on paper, a painting something on canvas, and that's that. Her
charcoal drawings, done with a fiercely scrubbed, hairy line
that broadens out into areas of velvety black, are often of
great intensity and beauty--so much so that their initial
attack sometimes appears diffused when they are taken up to
canvas size.
</p>
<p> But not often, and particularly not in the paintings from 1979
on, when glimpses of the human face and body start appearing
in Rothenberg's work. These are bluntly autobiographical, fragments
of depression that crunch a lot of extreme feeling into a very
small figurative compass. They are miserable figuration, sparse
in detail, almost resentfully so, but piercing in their plainness.
They bear no relation at all to the general run of '80s Neo-Expressionism,
which was overblown, self-dramatizing and almost industrially
repetitive.
</p>
<p> Instead they reach back to the earlier and more authentic anxieties
of Alberto Giacometti. Some depict vomiting heads, which, as
Rothenberg puts it in her catalog interview with Auping, were
"divorce images," conveying "a sense of something threatening,
like a stick in the throat...the whole choked-up mess of
separating from someone you care for and a child being involved."
Her combined face-hand images, like Red Head, 1980-81, are particularly
strong, perhaps because they so vividly combine a sign for openness
and approach (the human countenance) with one for rejection
or warding off (the open palm thrusting one's gaze away, or
the threatening closed fist). But what underwrites these pictographs,
and raises them above the level of emotional complaint, is the
messy beauty of the paint surface--the churned white ground
like dirty milk, the obsessed play of nuance within the thick
lines.
</p>
<p> Generally, Rothenberg seems to be at her best in paintings that
combine a single image with anxious focus. In the later '80s
she became preoccupied with a different, atmospheric style of
painting and images of dancers (including one of her aesthetic
heroes, the painter Piet Mondrian, imagined solemnly doing the
fox-trot with a Rothenberg-like partner). In their cold, flickering,
indistinct light, one catches long-distance echoes of Impressionism
and of the sequential-position photography that was once copied
by the Italian Futurists. In these, as in the drawings from
this period, form is extremely provisional--the shape of a
body teetering on a bicycle, for instance, emerges out of a
kind of fog produced by approximate lines, each an attempt to
fix some aspect of that shape.
</p>
<p> Rothenberg's latest work, done since she moved to New Mexico,
is even more diffuse than these and rarely seems to cohere well--apart from a change in technique (she uses a palette knife
now, after watching local workers troweling adobe), she has
not yet figured out how to deal with that immense landscape.
But these are early days, and Rothenberg has a gift for mulling
over diffuse impressions and suddenly pulling them together
in one piercing image of near hieroglyphic force. A recent example
is Blue U-Turn, 1989: an androgynous body, huge in scale and
bent into an inverted arch, vibrant with sparkles and detonations
of cobalt and ultramarine, swimming in deep marine space. It
seems powerful and benign, dispelling the angst of her earlier
work. It transcends Expressionism. Only a major talent could
have produced it.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>