Seeing great art free in downtown Manhattan, by Stephen DiLauro

Susan Swartz’s exhibition is enjoying an extended stay at Georges Berges Gallery in SoHo. Visitors will be able to view the vibrant, intriguing works now on display until November 20. Both a nature and abstract painter, in the same compositions, Swartz’s work is provoking discussion worthy of a major talent, which she is. The curator of the exhibition, Donald Kuspit, one of America’s most prominent and respected art critics and art historians, called Swartz “the best abstract nature painter alive today.” The exhibition is titled Renewal.

 

Apart from a painting of birch trees on view immediately to the left as one enters the gallery, a relentless artistic energy and concern for the importance of beauty and the power of color, are the overall first-blush sensations. However, upon close inspection, the canvasses reveal a painter’s cry from the soul, a desire for the gestural nature of brushstrokes to escape the flatness of the painting surface, which flatness is part of the essence of the birch trees painting.

To emphasize this breaking free, Swartz employs flower petals, mushrooms, leaves, seeds, and other organic detritus from nature. These organic elements are chemically stabilized with paint and clear lacquer. Swartz has written and spoken about Holy Scripture as a major source of her inspiration. In the presence of the paintings incorporating these elements from nature, Genesis Chapter 1 verses 29-30 came to my mind.

Freeing the painter’s gesture here is not unlike Julian Schnabel’s efforts to expand the artistic gestural in his famous plate paintings. Both artists, by challenging the boundaries of the painted surface, discovered an innate power in their efforts that might have previously only been hinted at. For Swartz, this change in approach to the canvas came at a critical personal juncture.

In mid-life, Swartz suffered the double whammy of Lyme disease and mercury poisoning from eating fish. While suffering and recovering, Swartz’s relationship to both nature and painting underwent a dramatic upheaval. It was during this time that her work became much more abstract. For example, there are smaller square paintings in which trees are barely suggested. They are abstract subjects rather than being portrayed figuratively as in her previous work.

72×48″, acrylic on linen, matched to painting

Swartz works in series and, in doing so, mines the cycles of nature and comes up with artistic gold. These series – Sunflowers; Evolution of Nature; Nature’s Bouquet; Shimmering Impressions; and Emerging Bouquet may all employ collaged elements from nature. Yet, make no mistake. These artworks are fully realized paintings with the rare power to draw in the viewer’s attention, and then to hold it almost endlessly. The artist seems to want to remind viewers that while there is no escaping the natural cycle of life and death, beauty is there every step of the way for those who would gather it in with their eyes.

The quality of Swartz’s relentless passion is ever-present in this powerful exhibit of work by an accomplished and much-lauded painter. Swartz’s work has been displayed in museums around the world.  Renewal is a chance to enjoy a museum-quality examination of this important artist’s work, without an admission fee.

Susan Swartz Renewal through November 20, Georges Berges Gallery, 462 West Broadway

In Other Art News
Speaking of museum admission fees, the Whitney has announced that beginning in mid-December anyone under 25 years of age will be admitted to the museum free of charge, every day. This is in addition to the Free Friday Nights (from 5 pm – 10 pm) and Free Second Sundays (all day), both programs which began in January of this year and are available to everyone. Online ticketing in advance is required. Check the Whitey Museum web site for more information: whitney.org/visit/free-days-and-nights

Stephen DiLauro is a playwright and poet who also writes about art.

Author

  • Stephen DiLauro is a New York playwright and writer. He adapted his play Avenue Z Afternoon for a GM Mark of Excellence television production. Several of his plays have been produced Off Broadway. From 2001 until 2017 he performed and wrote under the name Uke Jackson, beginning with a public radio show and culminating in an internet-based run for the President of the United States on a platform of free beer and bots on the ground, not boots. He also wrote several books of fiction and a musical comedy and he produced a music festival in Manhattan. He was also the front man for several jazz and novelty bands. During the 1990s he wrote and executive produced the award-winning public radio children's story series River Tales which was heard on nearly 200 stations. For many years he was a journalist and writer for the NY Times, Philadelphia Inquirer, Miami Herald Sunday Magazine and for leading American magazines.

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