Dichotomy
Kenneth Capps
Oceanside Museum of Art
Oceanside, CA - Exhibition runs through July 6th
Review by Cathy Breslaw
Crosswalk Two free-standing steel sculpture 2012 |
Standing among the
free-standing sculptures, ink on paper and steel drawings, and wall sculpture
works by Kenneth Capps, we are reminded of artists Brancusi, Donald Judd and
Robert Morris whose works fed the engine of minimalism during the mid to later
twentieth century. Capps continues that line in his homage to this movement in
his highly focused art practice of the past four decades. Known for his wood and steel public art, in
this exhibition Capps highlights steel and chrome, and ink on paper as his primary
materials while the sphere, triangle, and square become his primary
shapes. Therein he explores the
opposites of forms: rectilinear/curvilinear, convex/concave, positive/negative,
and open/closed spaces. “Line” is the common denominator in all the works
shown, whether they are painted, drawn or cut into steel or chrome. His lines travel in many directions,
often bursts of short lines of varying thicknesses cut into steel that move in
and out of three dimensional space within surfaces. While the works are limited
in their color palette to mostly black, and dark steel, there is an
array of surface variations of polished and shiny chrome, dull, and subtle modeled
areas. There is also an investigation of
space in both the works on paper and sculpture.
Capps’s works on paper appear to be more of a way of exploring line and
symbols in preparation for creating sculpture than stand alone pieces. There are three drawings on paper that stand
apart from the others which are “Cast”, “Study for D Side” and “Study for the
Distortion of the Square”, all created in 1975.
These ink drawings reveal the ‘hand of the artist’ as they are roughly
drawn, possess variations in color tones and exhibit mark-making
rather than the straightforward
filled in lines of his other drawings.
Simplicity and economy of design best describe Kenneth Capp’s work in
this exhibition.
Oceanside Museum of Art - Installation Shot wall ink drawings and free-standing steel sculpture |
No comments:
Post a Comment