• SIRI BERG at ETS Brodsky Gallery – Kenneth Martina

    Date posted: April 30, 2006 Author: jolanta

    SIRI BERG at ETS Brodsky Gallery

    Kenneth Martina

    The ETS Brodsky Gallery in Princeton is host to a series of works by the New
    York-based artist Siri Berg. The artworks are a selection of seven paintings
    and an equal number of Japanese woodblock prints.

    The paintings range
    in size and technique——from minimalist oils that adhere to a grid to
    a large scale paper pulp painting rendered in a medium imported for that specialized
    surface. The artist has spent a lifetime in quiet allegiance to color, the grid
    and residual design sensibilities of her native Sweden. Her process demands a
    careful mixing of oil paint and a quantitative application in careful steps onto
    her square compositions.

    Printmaking, an
    interest of Berg’s since the mid-nineties, is focused on the Japanese woodblock
    technique. Collage is sometimes incorporated into the print surface. What begins
    as a culture-bound process is taken to another level with careful carving that
    is evidence of Berg’s own thinking. The wood block material itself is from
    the forested regions of Japan, but the prints planned in the ambient light of
    the artist’s studio and are very much an expression of a multi-layered New
    York existence. She admits, however, that the Asian aesthetic is an almost subconscious
    consideration.

    Berg is an artist
    of international recognition but she never relies on familiar formulas. Her successes
    build through explorations. Her philosophical center is a weighing of opposite
    terms: light and dark, heavy and light, fear and comfort. She reflects that it
    is never known where her processes may lead. The range of works within a mature
    aesthetic demonstrates her ability to take risks and to be very personal through
    what, at first glance, may seem cool and distant. The works at Brodskey Gallery
    demonstrate that there is a calm and a well thought out beauty in Siri Berg’s
    mature works.

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