Francine Tint “Explorations” at The Cavalier Gallery, 3 West 57th Street, New York February 28-March 24, 2018
Art itself is inspired and diverse,
it merges and conflates ideas that take the form of creative expression in ways
difficult to define. The paintings of Francine Tint are a perfect example of
this. At first we may view them as agglomerations of pure pigment, but soon we
begin to see portions of her composition stand out from the rest. They take
over our concentration. From these elements to the support, our attention
teeters back and forth, creating absurdity and doubt. Titled “Explorations,” her new solo
exhibition at The Cavalier Gallery, presents a variety of canvases in which
metaphors of motion or growth figure highly. The current paintings of Francine
Tint express a variety of truths with a great vigor and deftness of touch.
Tint’s paintings take from a broad visual register, and they abound in color
and vitality. Nothing here sits idly within its own composition upon the
canvas, sleeping in the somnolence of stylistic ease. Hers is the minutiae of a
mind on fire, constantly in motion, of progress toward the next several
statements she is interested to make.
“Blooms of Darkness” (2018) references
the “blooms of the night”— spectral events that occur in the mind of someone
overwhelmed by nature. While staring out into the pervasive darkness, a
phenomena that expresses the rational mind’s limits at comprehending the
absence of humanity in a ‘wild’ place. Abstraction therefore creates an event
that is seemingly real.
Blooms of Darkness, 2018, Acrylic on canvas, 42 x 44 inches |
“Dubstep” (2016) takes its title from
a club craze popular since around 2010 in which reggae syncopations inform and
are utilized by musicians who use synthesizers and turntables to create an
extremely aggressive form of electronic dance music. It can range from simple
pop tunes to DJ-generated walls of pure sound. In a club environment, dancing
to the music, lulled by drink and good cheer, the music can prove
transformative, generating an extreme release from everyone present as the music
takes over and they lose control. The forms in this painting are tidal, like
the shape a wave takes as it barrels toward the shore, carrying everything with
it—sand, fish, possibly a surfer, creating immense tension, a dynamo of motion
that endlessly feeds back into itself. It resembles what in electronic terms is
called a feedback loop, in which energy pulses outward and then returns to its
source.
Dubstep, 2016, Acrylic on canvas, 56 x 54 inches |
“Electric Sunrise” (2018) is a
affirmation of that primal event that begins each day since the time of
creation. Day emerges from night in a diffusion of searing light and the
commingling of all elements being charged by the presence of illumination. Seen
from off at a great distance, framed by tall buildings or trees, the locus of
our attention is filled with swarming and whooshing forms that could be birds,
leaves, dust, and in addition, some primal matter exposed at the moment when a
celestial event makes all things imminently transparent. We are compelled by
the sublime grace of this event.
Electric Sunrise, 2018, Acrylic on canvas, 48 x 60 inches |
“Velvet Explosion” (2017) presents us with a swooning study
in seismic forces that could be volcanic magma pouring out upon the deep ocean floor,
or it could be an electric charge releasing with in the blood vessels or brain
pathways of the human body. There is a heating up out of absolute coolness, a
churning, and then out of pure air, a spark lets fly. Inspiration is the métier
of the world as felt, or sensed, from voluptuousness and carnal pleasure, into
intimacy, then introspection, and finally something is born. This is motion in
its most innate form.
Velvet Explosion, 2016, Acrylic on canvas, 23 x 27 inches |
“Star Wars” (2016) makes me think of
the films I have been seeing since I was a boy of ten years. I see an alien
landscape, and through it flows a force, manifesting as dark and malevolent, or
it could be a shadow of a hovercraft, carrying someone to his as yet unknown
destiny. The mythical quality of these films takes us back into a world of pure
reckoning. They are like futuristic westerns, journeys to knowledge through
distant and inhospitable lands, where intuition trumps power. The hero who
knows himself better can be victorious.
Star Wars, 2016, Acrylic on canvas, 21 x 37 inches |
These and many other paintings by
Francine Tint provide us with models for the exploration of reality in a
heightened degree of chromatic and gestural perception. The lessons of painting
that Tint has gleaned from her several decades of making art in the community
of artists, and indeed, within the history of art, are a palimpsest of meaning
that can only be realized by the act of looking. Tint knows form, and uses all
of her powers to move us. She uses form to fill the world, tilting it ever so
much into the unknown, where we follow.
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