• Chris Natrop: Drawing With A Knife – Jamey Hacht

    Date posted: May 9, 2006 Author: jolanta

    Chris Natrop: Drawing With A Knife

    Jamey Hacht

    “I have come to cut paper,
    rather than draw in the traditional way, because I find that creating imagery
    from hard-edged silhouettes satisfies my desire to maintain a steadiness within
    line and form.”

    –Chris Natrop

    At its most austere, neo-classical
    art consists only of outline with no modeling or spatial depth; even in more
    fully modeled paintings and friezes the action is contained within a narrow shelf-like
    space. Movement is clearly articulated across the surface plane, diametrically
    opposed to the spatial complexities in depth of the baroque.

    –David Irwin, article on Neo Classicism in Dictionary of the History of
    Ideas.

     Long ago, D. H. Lawrence wrote a book about
    Etruscan art in which he claimed that the salient difference between those surviving
    works and many other ancient pictures was the Etruscan use of outlines instead
    of volumetric modeling. An efflorescence of interest in this art shaped the neoClassical
    stuff churned out in the late 18th Century, and a hundred years later, Gauguin’s
    cloisonée paintings brought the issue of outlining back into public discourse
    about art. In this age of defaced Goya prints, formaldehyde sharks and beefsteaks
    nailed to the gallery wall, a formal issue like contour drawing can still make
    an important statement, provided it’s made through some kind of innovation
    in an artist’s process.

     Chris Natrop has done it: drawing with
    a knife is the contemporary response to an ancient question about representation.
    This is a biomorphic art, midway between lacemaking and landscape. Seven-foot
    sheets of white paper are reticulated with thousands of blank holes comprising
    a natural thicket of lilies and climbers and vines. Whereas drawing is an additive
    process in which an artist makes the marks that build an eventual image, Natrop’s
    work is as subtractive as sculpture; it creates by taking away from an initial
    wholeness until something strange is left. So it isn’t modeling — but
    it isn’t carving either, since it doesn’t start with a shapeless mass
    of stone or marble. It starts with a giant roll of paper, which is an industrially
    manufactured object, and goes through the artist’s individual bourgeois
    labor, to emerge as an imitation of nature. Very good: a common story that applies
    to most of the art produced since people stopped mixing their own paint. But
    in Natrop, there’s nothing but some paper and a lot of nothingness. As drawing,
    it’s nothing: there are no marks on the paper. As sculpture, couldn’t
    be more minimal since it’s two-dimensional; view it edge-on, and it becomes
    one-dimensional. What have we here?

     The works recall Art Nouveau products,
    like William Morris’ sinuous wallpaper designs or the illustrations of Aubrey
    Beardsley. But those belonged on a wall, either framed in glass or pasted onto
    plaster; or they served handsomely as the endpapers of books (e.g., Van de Velde’s
    1908 edition of Nietzsche’s Ecce Homo). Natrop’s giant knife-drawings,
    by contrast, are positioned in front of monochrome background screens onto which
    they cast shadows that repeat the cut-out paper form. In the white version at
    the front, the image is formed by the absence of paper in the negative space;
    in the black version at the screen behind it, the image is formed by the absence
    of light in the positive space. Where there was paper in front, there’s
    darkness on the screen; where there was nothing in front, there’s light
    on the screen. I won’t go so far out as to claim that all this evokes the
    slit-plate “interference pattern” set-ups that figure so prominently
    in experimental demonstrations of quantum mechanical paradoxes. That sounds way
    too spooky and remote. But it seems pretty certain that Natrop is talking about
    existence and nothingness. Emptiness and shadow are most of what’s here,
    and what’s solid is an incredibly fragile, uniquely complex, blank remainder
    of cut paper.

     What an art critic should do, I think,
    is describe the work, then say what it reminds him of, then take a bow and go
    away. Take a look at these lines from Keats’ “Ode On A Grecian Urn”:

     Ah, happy, happy boughs! that cannot shed

     Your leaves, nor ever bid the Spring adieu;

    (ll.21, 22)

     When old age shall this generation waste,

     Thou shalt remain, in midst of other woe

     Than ours, a friend to man… (11.46-48)

     Now look again at the impossible vulnerability
    of Eddy Grub Burst and Lily Swell Machine. This is a paper-sculpture more perishable
    than the leaves it depicts. What will become of it?

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