| “Barbara
L. Bachner: An abstract painter for the postmodern age”
By Ed McCormack
ARTSPEAK, Vol. XVII, No. 1, Sept. 1994, New York, NY
Only God has been declared dead more often than painting, yet gifted
individuals continue to resurrect the art, as seen in the splendid solo
show of Barbara L. Bachner, at TAI Gallery, Actor's Institute, 48 West
21 Street, August 15 through September 15, with a reception for the artist
on Thursday, September 8, from 6 to 8 PM.
Barbara L. Bachner, is truly an abstractionist for the postmodern age,
in that she began as a figurative painter and has recently found effective
ways to integrate recognizable elements, such as images of eyes within
triangles or small rectangular landscapes, into her canvases, without
in any way compromising their compositional dynamics. Included in this
show are acrylic paintings and large lithographs, for which Bachner finds
inspiration in Classical Art, Abstract Expressionism, and Surrealism,
forging from such diverse sources her own powerful post-modern synthesis.
Bachner's first decision when she begins a new work, painting or print,
always involves color. Lately, she has been particularly partial to deep,
visceral reds, as well as a rich variation of ochre that she refers to
as a "pumpkin" hue. These two colors commingle most effectively
in her boldly composed lithograph, "Into the Void, II," with
its shapely, lung like organic form flaring against large rectangular
divisions. In other works, particularly major acrylic paintings such as
"Elliptical Vision" and her monumental vertical diptych, "Calaf’s
Choice," the artist moves easily between recognizable imagery and
abstract form, creating compelling visual contrasts that are complemented
by her energetic paint handling.
Along with a vigorous gesturalism, Bachner employs rugged textures to
lend her paintings a vital physicality, sometimes enhanced by the addition
of pumice gel and stainless steel pigments, as seen in "Final Balance,"
one other most tactile paintings, with its sensually varied surface and
brooding silvery grey tones.
What makes Barbara L. Bachner's canvases so exciting is that her sheer
physical involvement renews one's faith in painting as a viable postmodern
field of endeavor, in which the very materiality of pigment can express
a wide variety of deathless themes and important ideas. |