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CRITICS PICKS LOS ANGELES
Steve Roden
SUSANNE VIELMETTER GALLERY
July 10-August 07
2004
Sol LeWitt began his 1969 "Sentences on Conceptual Art"
with the following gem: "Conceptual artists are mystics rather than rationalists.
They leap to conclusions that logic cannot reach."
In a series of thirteen paintings titled "the silent world" (all works
2004), Steve Roden reveals "mystic truths" by running the title of Jacques
Cousteau's first book through a word-to-image transposition of his own
devising, arriving at a postlinguistic epistemology of painterly sensation.
The cryptic means are less important than the pulsatory results: In these
densely mapped small to medium-size canvases, organic and crystalline
regimes interlock through bright primary daubs and linear patterns that
engage murkier earth-toned passages.
Despite the opacity of the systems in operation, there is nothing solipsistic
about the work: Roden's paintings gamely bridge missed connections among
the concurrent tactics of Conceptual art, Situationist drifting, and psychedelic
culture, suggesting a secret, more unruly (and hence more satisfying)
version of art history than usually admitted.
The polymathic artist also serves up a serene sound sculpture suggestively
titled duet (your magnetic ashes) and an exquisite suite of drawings divined
from goofy, faux-onomatopoeic transcriptions of birdcalls found in an
old book-and-record set.
Intuition has become a dirty word in contemporary-art discourse, but Roden
wears it as a badge of honor, following his own loopy logic to discover
hidden potentialities and irrational rewards and leaping to conclusions
no system could reach without a little "mystic" tinkering.
Michael Ned Holte
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