Exhibition

in Los Angeles, CA / United States
24.10.2015 - 19.12.2015 10:00 - 18:00
James Hyde - Ground

Luis De Jesus Los Angeles is pleased to present “James Hyde: Ground”.

“Ground” follows his 20-year survey at Palazzo Farnese in Piacenza, Italy, and is his first Los Angeles solo exhibition in two decades. The exhibition is accompanied by a fully illustrated catalog that features interviews by curator Lucía Sanromán and artist Lucas Blalock.

An influential and respected figure, Hyde uses the flat field of painting as a topological arena that ties together the physical substance of painting and the ground on which it is laid, extracting spatial dimensions and new meanings from this relationship. In these increasingly direct works, he utilizes abstraction to break photography’s semantic hold on the way we construct an image of the world. (1)

Hyde looks to the ideas of Nancy Holt and Robert Smithson and their concept of the site and non-site. By framing the natural landscape within the artificial, associations attached to both nature photography and abstract painting are unpacked and deconstructed. As discussed with Lucía Sanromán, “By framing the photograph within the ‘objectness’ of painting… a type of painterly suspicion is created in the photograph”.

Beginning in 2009 Hyde took to the hills of California to photograph the vistas and great panoramas off Interstate 5. Coming from New York, Hyde was struck by the openness and vast perspectives of the California landscape. Two years later he revisited the sites he first photographed, including Pyramid Lake and the oak trees depicted in the series.

The title “Ground” resonates with the descriptive photography of western landscapes. In the painting context, the ground is the active place on which painting occurs. Hyde uses a home brewed paint for these works, consisting of pigment dispersed in acrylic mediums, and in most cases that pigment is a form of ground earth. In turn, Hyde’s photographs follow a “light-room” process developed in the computer, distorting and adjusting it and challenging the notion of any factual naturalism.

Resisting genres and traversing mediums, Hyde investigates the abstract gesture in relationship to photography. His opposition to the “realism” of digital photography, placed against the colors of abstracted shapes, snaps photography into place, making it a site, a location, and naturalizing it as a pictorial fact while reframing the question of the truthfulness of photography.

In “Clearing”, a photograph of an oak tree is centered in a tondo of minimalist gray. Painted in acrylic dispersion, the bands of gray usurp the austerity of the photograph, literally turning it on its head. Conjuring distances within the plains depicted in “Channels” and “Wash”, the foregrounded layers of painted shapes act as iterations of perspective, stepping beyond the material flatness of painting interventions into the background of landscapes.

“These works undermine an unquestioned authority of photography as a prosthesis for seeing,” say Hyde, “meaning that today we believe that we actually see like the camera – the model is our eyesight mimics the prosthesis rather than the other way around. This analogy that the camera is our eye, I want to put pressure on that, because it is not true. Our eyes are emotional muscles. …By putting pressure on the narrowness of abstract painting through photography, I would hope both become more vibrant in terms of what each is at its root, even as the technical grounds of how we look at the world are changing.”

Hyde further explains: “I think what is essential for painting to become real and vibrant is for it to embrace some form of otherness. With more traditional paintings it’s drawing that is this Other, but it could be poetry, landscape, ideology or sculpture. It is through taking up these others that painting can develop perspective and become real in itself. In this group of works photography is the “other” that defines them as painting; that allows it to become painting.”

1) Lucía Sanromán, “James Hyde,” in “Unsettled Landscapes” (Santa Fe: SITE Santa Fe, 2014), Pp. 138.

Gallery hours Tues-Sat 10 am – 6 pm, and by appointment

www.luisdejesus.com

Location:
Luis De Jesus Los Angeles
2685 S La Cienega Boulevard
90034 Los Angeles, CA
United States

0 Comments

Leave a reply

Contact us

We're not around right now. But you can send us an email and we'll get back to you, asap.

Sending

© likeyou artnet / online since 1999 / www.likeyou.com / Privacy Policy / Terms of Use

Log in with your credentials

or    

Forgot your details?

Create Account