• Lance Denh�’s Delivery – Aaron Zimmerman

    Date posted: May 1, 2006 Author: jolanta

    Lance Denh�’s Delivery

    Aaron Zimmerman

    I don’t need much from an image: bold color, a unique sense of form and
    light, and something that revives my purpose to make paintings. Lately I’ve
    craved it more and more. Maybe it’s the war. Maybe it’s the spring
    that is still winter here in New York. Whatever the case my needs were met and
    exceeded in Lance Dehne’s show at 473 Broadway Gallery.

    Lance created a poetic compromise between air and color, whimsy and analysis,
    organization and discombobulation, gravity and weightlessness. The pieces were
    handled with the sensibility of a sky writer on acid. I ran into the work of
    Miro’s grandson in Carroll Dunham’s Math class. Seeing his work was
    like looking at Swiss cheese creatures covered in Mardi Gras beads at the county
    air show. And I wasn’t even high!

    Metaphors aside,
    I’m always seduced by the successful duplication of light pouring through
    space. The “quick way out” vogue for pulling this off since the days
    of Monet has been an absence of forms. But Lance pulls it off with a cacophony.
    Congealing on flat fields of neutrality or resting above maps, his shapes dance
    around with a choreographed openness that allows rather than crowds.

    What’s more
    his systems of progression animate the madness methodically and maniacally. He
    creates audacity despite modesty in scale. And his sense of messiness is tempered
    by an intuitive perfectionism given only to scientific method gone wild.

    I don’t know how he does it. I’m envious and inspired.

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