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ESSAYS Albert's approach to abstraction and to painting is squarely in the camp of those painters mentioned where painting is always about the literal beauty of the material thing and the transendent magic that occures when all is, finally, put down just right. Where do we go when this transcendent spark occurs? To the ocean, to death, to simply somehere beyond ourselves? To beauty itself? I don't know that I am grateful for the heightened experience I feel when looking at a weaver painting, being eternally caught between a Here of crisp wonderous phenomena and a There of enchanted human reverie. - Joshua Mitchell Albert layers paint on to canvas or linen through a process of addition and subtraction that results in a surface that is worn and rubbed, scratched and skidded. The canvas becomes a receptacle where a specific physical action occurs and is recorded, like a hand pressed into plaster or fingerprints on glass. Ironically, Albert's work erases the gesture of the hand; the gesture appears to be much bigger and broader, suggesting a roller or squeegee. The surface then becomes the blur of the el train going by Lake Michigan at night or an aerial view of farms in the Midwest. Although I make references to imagery that Albert's paintings evoke for me, the fact remains that the paintings exist in simple physical terms. Wet paint then dry, layered and removed and layered again until the "right' texture is created. These works invite close inspection: a buzzing of color, small scratches of light coming through, surprising bites of green embedded in a band of gray. Like any painting - these are just paint on canvas, yet Albert's unique process produces paintings that are exquisite objects, a song's refrain. - Rachel Davis, Chicago, IL |
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© Albert Sunjoon Weaver 1997 - 2011 All Rights Reserved
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