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steve
roden
press
july 30 - august
5, 2004
Art Pick by Peter Frank
Does it matter that the conceptual substructure of Steve Roden's juicy
little abstract paintings is a phrase - "the silent world"-
codified into myriad shapes and colors and even textures? Aren't the results
gratifying enough to the eye not to require the extra information? Well,
it does matter, because if that's what brought these paintings about,
then that's what counts.
Yes, Roden's own witty way with shapes and his effulgent painting technique
- the pigment slathered on like icing, and bristling with every possible
color (so long as it's bright, or at least clear) - are what made the
paintings. But what prompted them is Roden's complex response to the phrase
(actually the title of Jacques Cousteau's first book) and his process
of translating English into painting. The very idea of turning words into
images has a daffiness to it, Roden at once deconstructing and pushing
at the idea of synesthesia.
In his poem "Les Voyelles," Arthur Rimbaud proposed that the
vowels were like colors, according to a system the poet felt rather than
simply made up. Roden - who also shows a painting and a sculpture based
on a Sunday-school song score and a suite of drawings derived from the
transliterations of bird songs - allows himself the same deep subjectivity
as Rimbaud, and commands the same exquisite care in exercising that subjectivity
and turning it into more art. For a topper, Roden shows a sound-sculpture
installation whose sound source is his own guitar and that of the guitarist
from his high school punk band. Rock on!
Steve Roden at Susanne Vielmetter, 5795 W. Washington Blvd., Culver City;
Tues.-Sat., noon-6 p.m. (323) 933-2117. through Aug. 7.
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