• Otto Berchem’s 16th Minute – Amiel Grumberg

    Date posted: June 14, 2006 Author: jolanta

    Otto Berchem’s 16th Minute

    Amiel Grumberg

    Image 
    Avoiding
    the picturesque entirely, Julie Bozzi creates American landscape paintings that
    portray the antiheroic. The artist works sitting in her car, usually at dusk,
    looking through the windshield at her chosen site. Her process is echoed in the
    format of her paintings, which depict narrow stretches of land that, although
    anonymous on many levels, have a distinct familiarity as American places. The
    seemingly natural locations she depicts are actually man-made, utilitarian
    spaces often designed to act as sight or sound barriers on the sides of
    highways or on the edges of cities and suburbs. Because the titles of these
    works occasionally name the site depicted, such as Periphery of Botanic
    Garden (From Remote Parking Lot), 2001, the place can be pinpointed by anyone who knows the
    area. However, the artist’s intense treatment of each location puts it in an
    entirely new light. In fact, there is an undercurrent of anxiety that keeps
    Bozzi’s scenes from being benign. These are “outskirts”— the pockets of land
    where you find the empty six-pack. This is where people go who are themselves
    on the fringe.

    Bozzi
    acknowledges the mythic aspect of Texas and its influences on her imagery. She
    is particularly drawn to the ominous sides of the myth: the infamous grassy
    knoll in Dallas linked to the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, the
    clock tower on the campus of the University of Texas at Austin that deranged
    Vietnam veteran Charles Whitman climbed in order to gun down innocent victims,
    the roadside field on the outskirts of Denton where the notorious serial killer
    Henry Lee Lucas dumped the body of his girlfriend, the prairie field near Waco
    where the Branch Davidian standoff ended in flames. These events occurred in
    various nondescript patches of land in Texas, any of which could be the subject
    for Bozzi’s landscapes, making the works disturbing in that we suspect what
    might be present, even when it remains concealed.

     

    Considering
    the foreboding, isolating nature of a Bozzi landscape, it is not surprising
    that one of her favorite American painters is Albert Pinkham Ryder (1847–1917),
    recognized for his enigmatic pastoral scenes and imaginative, poetic personal
    vision. Ryder looked to the Romantic poets and authors for inspiration, Byron,
    Keats, and Poe among them, to create highly symbolic works, including nocturnal
    seascapes, romantic landscapes, and literary subjects. His unorthodox work ran
    counter to the masculine transcendental Hudson River School painters, and for
    his unique style and subject matter, he was revered among the early modernist
    painters of the twentieth century. Although he often depicts figures within the
    landscape—in works such as Death on a Pale Horse
    style=’font-size:8.0pt;font-family:Verdana’>, c. 1896–1908, one of his most
    important—it is again not surprising that one of Bozzi’s favorite paintings of
    his, Weir’s Orchard,
    1885–90 (figure 4) is a brooding, unpopulated scene. Like her works,
    style=’font-size:8.0pt;font-family:Verdana’>it displays a simplification of
    form and an atmosphere imbued with mystery.

     

    Bozzi’s
    imagery also represents an eccentric synthesis of postwar portrayals of the
    American landscape. With progress, westward expansion, and a shift from
    agricultural to industrial development at the turn of the century, landscape
    painting evolved from projecting “the promised land” to mirroring a changing
    nation. Rejecting the romantic grandeur of their predecessors, the early
    twentieth-century Ashcan School created politically charged urban scenes with
    an imagery that acknowledged social problems. Artists involved with the Ashcan
    School, such as Arthur B. Davies, Robert Henri, and John Sloan, depicted, much
    to the distaste of their critics, scenes such as the alleyways and slums of
    inner-city dwellings. In the 1930s and 1940s, nationalism resurfaced with the
    Regionalists, among them Grant Wood, John Steuart Curry, and Thomas Hart
    Benton, who celebrated the American lifestyle by depicting rural scenes in a
    concise manner. Bozzi, with her use of urban sites that can appear rural, might
    be seen as creating gentler versions of these two extremes. However, more than
    the Ashcan School or the Regionalists, Bozzi’s work pays homage to the
    influential American painter Edward Hopper, who was painting at the same time
    as Benton and the Regionalists, but operated on the opposite end of the
    landscape spectrum.

     

    Hopper
    painted the so-called “American scene,” but rather than being nationalistic,
    his works are personal and charged with a psychological impact, often conveying
    loneliness and the vacuity of city life. In his “Notes on Painting,” Hopper
    writes, “The question of the value of nationality in art is perhaps unsolvable.
    In general it can be said that a nation’s art is greatest when it most reflects
    the character of its people.”
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    Bozzi’s work indicates that she, like Hopper, acknowledges a darkness within
    the American character. Her imagery also relates to Hopper’s in terms of
    composition, often presenting a horizontal, highly representational space with
    nearly flat masses of color. Her Nondescript Border of Mixed Varieties of
    Trees, a gouache
    from 1993, for example, depicts a stacked view of a road and trees. From the
    foreground to the background, the picture frankly describes a narrow strip of
    asphalt, grass, a row of trees, and a still blue sky with a few scattered
    clouds. When compared to a late Hopper entitled Road and Trees
    style=’font-size:8.0pt;font-family:Verdana’>, 1962, the visual similarities,
    choice of subject matter, and atmosphere come together to create a clear
    lineage from the older to the younger artist. Bozzi’s work is extremely scaled
    down and condensed, but both artists depict a straightforward, sober American
    landscape without epic markers or glorifications.

     

    While
    typical landscape paintings invite the viewer in along diagonals receding into
    space, Bozzi’s compositions are invariably frontal. The illusion of space is
    created almost entirely through overlapping. In many cases, a barrier such as a
    wall, hedgerow, fence, or road makes up a significant part of the composition,
    denying easy access to the space beyond. In this way, her landscapes reflect
    the acute objectivity of her own time. As she matured as an artist in the
    1970s, Minimalism was in full force, and Bozzi was clearly influenced by
    elements within the movement, applying some of its characteristics to
    representational objects. Her non-hierarchical compositions, stripped-down
    colors, and the frontality of her pictorial field relate specifically to
    Minimalist sculpture. An early work, Immature Tomato Field and Mt. Diablo,
    Davis, California,
    1977, clearly exemplifies this format. Bozzi uses a frontal composition
    (without perspective points to create depth) with bands of color moving from
    front to back to describe a green tomato field as seen from the side of the
    road. This type of format and treatment of the landscape has developed into her
    conscious and permanent style.

     

    Bozzi’s
    close-cropped imagery also signifies her interest in and involvement with
    photography, perhaps most clearly relating to a new wave of photographers who
    emerged in the 1970s in the wake of Minimalist strategies, summarized within
    the movement known as New Topographics.
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    This group of artists depicted a landscape severely drained of romance,
    nostalgia, and heroism, creating works with a reverse sensibility of the
    landscape photographers who came before them, such as Timothy O’Sullivan and
    Ansel Adams, who, like the early landscape painters, exalted the American West
    in their imagery.

     

    Robert
    Adams, considered part of the New Topographic movement, used photography to
    record an unflinching look at man’s impact on the land. A mobile home park, a
    row of cookie-cutter houses with almost bare lots and overhead telephone poles
    and electrical wires, and a tree surrounded by litter in a ditch on the side of
    the highway all become subjects of Adams’s work. Like Adams’s photographs,
    Bozzi’s landscapes portray transitional spaces, which are often obsolete or
    “dead.” In Damaged Hedgerow, 1987, for example, a row of shrubs, obviously planted as
    part of a city or state plan, has been neglected to the point of appearing to
    be in a shabby state of ruin. Yet each damaged shrub is transformed into a
    thing of importance by Bozzi’s isolated and concentrated treatment of it.
    Although she jokes about her technique and subject matter, referring to herself
    as “a voyeur of the mundane,” her scenes contain a sense of romance absent in
    Adams’s work. Bozzi presents something less overtly bleak or political—hers are
    more subtle, lush, and intimate spaces of discomfort.

    In the
    catalogue that accompanied the 1992 exhibition of her body of work depicting
    food, American Food: Julie Bozzi, the artist quotes a question posed in the 1981 film My
    Dinner with Andr�:
    “Why do we require a trip to Mount Everest in order to be able to perceive one
    moment of reality?”
    style=’mso-bookmark:_ftnref3′>[3]
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    That question sums up what Bozzi’s landscapes, as well as her food motifs,
    repeatedly ask us to consider. Choosing the atypical view and avoiding the
    panoramic vista, Bozzi creates landscapes that are, rather than romantically
    sublime like early American painters and photographers, or romantically void,
    like Adams and the other New Topographers, perhaps somewhere in the
    middle—romantically bland. They make us take note of the places we usually
    ignore, and they instigate a search for meaning in the landscape. “In my work,”
    Bozzi explains, “the neglected is treated very seriously, imparting value to
    the valueless, and this feeds into my ideas of myself as an explorer, like
    Charles Darwin on the voyage of the Beagle, finding things of interest that
    others have overlooked.”
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    style=’mso-bookmark:_ftn1′>
    style=’font-size:8.0pt;font-family:Verdana’>[1]
    style=’mso-bookmark:_ftn1′>
    style=’font-size:8.0pt;font-family:Verdana’> Edward Hopper, “Notes on
    Painting,” quoted in Lloyd Goodrich, Catalogue for Edward Hopper
    Retrospective Exhibition (New York: Whitney Museum of American Art in association with Harry
    N. Abrams, 1950): 162. Originally published in A. H. Barr, Jr., Catalogue for Edward
    Hopper: Retrospective Exhibition (New York: The Museum of Modern Art, 1933).

    style=’font-size:8.0pt;font-family:Verdana’>[2]
    style=’mso-bookmark:_ftn2′>
    style=’font-size:8.0pt;font-family:Verdana’> The exhibition New
    Topographics: Photographers of a Man-Altered Landscape,
    style=’font-size:8.0pt;font-family:Verdana’>curated by William Jenkins and
    presented at the Eastman House in Rochester, New York in 1975, featured Robert
    Adams, Bernd and Hilla Becher, Lewis Baltz, Nicholas Nixon, and others. The
    exhibition established the movement in a public way.

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    style=’font-size:8.0pt;font-family:Verdana’> Wallace Shawn and Andr� Gregory, My
    Dinner with Andr�
    (New York: Grove Press, 1981). Quoted in American Food: Julie Bozzi
    style=’font-size:8.0pt;font-family:Verdana’>(San Diego: Museum of Contemporary
    Art, San Diego, 1992). See Biography of the Artist for exhibition dates and
    tour details.

    style=’font-size:8.0pt;font-family:Verdana’>[4]
    style=’mso-bookmark:_ftn4′>
    style=’font-size:8.0pt;font-family:Verdana’> Letter to the author, April 25,
    2003. Darwin set sail on the H.M.S. Beagle with Captain Robert Fitz Roy on a
    circumnavigational voyage that lasted from 1831 to 1836. Darwin, the ship’s
    naturalist, eventually used his resulting notes and research to formulate his
    theory of evolution by natural selection.

     

    Credit:
    This is a shortened version of the catalogue essay that accompanies the
    exhibition, Julie Bozzi: Landscapes 1975–2003
    style=’color:black’> (from November 23, 2003–February 22, 2004, at the Modern
    Art Museum of Fort Worth.) Andrea Karnes is an associate curator at the Modern.
    style=’font-size:8.0pt;font-family:Verdana’>

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