| "Collective
exhibit presents image of ebullience"
By Joan D’Arcy
Excerpt from “Art Beat”, Daily Freeman,
Dec. 12, 1997, Kingston, NY
(...) Bachner’s stony slabs with words like commandments graven
or printed upon thin rice paper adhering to an irregularly shaped base
is reminiscent of the carved surfaces of pre-historic hieroglyphs uncovered
in Egypt or Ireland. The viewer is conscious of a story being told by
words whose meanings leap from slab to slab in an incantation or an unspoken
saga. Bachner has left sound far behind.
According to the artist, her work reflects entries from her personal journals
coupled with her intense interest in the surface of the piece. A technique
of raised indentation supplies her with an endless means of layering paint,
then pulling monotype images on Asian paper from the paintings themselves.
"As to the meaning and content, the language of my journals, often
referring to dreams, is transformed, sometimes through reverse printing,
into mysterious marks that are recognizable as some kind of alphabet,
unidentifiable in nature, and sometimes into forms eliciting identification
with natural phenomena," Bachner explains.
The words and letters on the surface move and interweave as the viewer
concentrates as if viewed through a glass of pale gold-flecked water,
growing larger or smaller as the water moves the focus. Despite the hieratic
stillness of the work, there is a passionate visual articulation in the
script. Just as the earliest styles of incised lettering (like the 12th
century Caroline minuscule), was integral to the sacredness of the image.
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