| 19 June - 29 August 2004
One of our most
internationally prominent and successful artists, Max Gimblett has
lived in New York for over 30 years. Yet, despite his standing,
The Brush of All Things is the first public gallery survey of
Gimblett's work in New Zealand. Curated by Wystan Curnow, it spans
over 25 years of work, representing all the main strands of his
practice. That's quite a task, as Gimblett is a prolific artist
and his work is extraordinarily broad, stylistically and
philosophically.
Gimblett is important. "Max gives New
Zealand a foothold in late modernist painting, because locally we
don't have anyone who develops directly out of Abstract
Expressionism", says Curnow. In the 1970s, alongside
other New York painters like Joseph Marioni and Brice Marden, Gimblett
was part of a move leading out of Abstract Expressionism towards
monochrome painting. But, in the early 1980s, like Marden,
Gimblett decided monochrome painting was too limiting, too
doctrinaire, and went back to the well of Abstract Expressionism
to refurbish and rejuvenate his work. It prompted a major
expansion in his practice.
Gimblett's work is rich
and inventive. He is known for his technical and stylistic range:
the monochrome, geometric abstraction, the calligraphic and
figurative expressionism all find a place in the work. He uses
novel shaped supports - quatrefoils (a format he has really made
his own), circles, rings and ovals. There sometimes appear to be
many Gimbletts: one is an extroverted colourist, another pursues
the subtle luminous effects of gilded and lacquered surfaces.
Gimblett also conjures with a large bag of metaphysical and
philosophical ideas, drawing freely on
Buddhism, Christianity, classical mythology, alchemy, Jung. His
work can be understood in the context of Western Buddhism, a vein
of inquiry that fuses aspects of Eastern and Western thought and
takes in American artists as diverse as John Cage, James Lee Byars
and William Burroughs.
Curnow says: "Max is emotional - the work
embodies a mighty spectrum of feeling and he
doesn't shy from big themes. Violence, sacrifice and death; fear
and awe; beauty, pleasure, peace and joy - all play a role. His
works engage both ends of the sublime, the negative (terror, fear
and awe) and the positive (beauty and uplift)." The
show plays up both poles, juxtaposing works expressing Gimblett's
growing devotion to the beautiful with works exposing his dark
side, what Jung called The Shadow.
The Brush of All Things
will feature a film of Gimblett painting and will be accompanied
by a publication featuring writing by Curnow and prominent New
York critic Thomas McEvilley.
Admission charge.
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