
Brian
Zink
Assembled
January
6 - February 7, 2012
Every form is a base for colour; every colour is the attribute
of a form.
- Victor Vasarely
With Assembled, Brian Zink returns to his well-known colored Plexiglas
construction practice. Zink’s new work, however, extends
that language into a critical consideration of the symbiotic and
uncanny relationship between pure abstraction and pictorial space.
For Zink, the real springs from the sheer presence of the material
object – and, as the show’s title and an initial inspection
make clear, the works are Assembled from machine-manufactured
parts. Each work is constructed of a thick flat plastic slab supporting
a careful arrangement of glossy, commercially-colored, chunky
Plexiglas diamonds and rhombi. The compositions appear regular:
a simple, direct pattern sustained by a single hue balanced against
black, white, and/or gray. In fact each comprises a symmetrical
design that suggests an infinite repetition, the base repeat of
an endless pattern. Like other Zink constructions, we’re
rooted by their materiality, simplicity, and patterning to a consideration
of the real space we occupy with them.
But this rootedness gradually unfolds into another, uncanny experience
of space. The sharp diagonals and strident horizontals and verticals
of Zink’s designs assemble strange, shallow pictorial spaces
for us to consider. Coinciding with each other and the edges of
their patterned parameters, Zink’s shapes become floating
planes, tilted doorways, bottomless windows, sharply lit blocks
– almost, for they inevitably bump into or crash against
the geometric purity, materiality, and exterior realness of the
object.
The resulting experience keeps us hopping uncomfortably between
the two familiar comfort zones of abstraction – the interior
real, or pictorial space, and the exterior real, or object space.
Each challenges and undermines the other; a pattern of diagonals
slides awkwardly into a dramatically elongated arcade; architectural
blocks reform into a non-hierarchical series of trapezoids. But
the works never reduce to an op-art curiosity of abstraction:
Zink doesn’t let his shapes and colors become unreal, brute
facts, but keeps them peering into our world, our architecture,
our space. As Vasarely suggests, the natural coincidence of color
and form lie at the heart of experience itself. Brian Zink’s
new work invites us into this heart, into his immense sensitivity
to the life of form.
For further information please contact Howard Yezerski Gallery
617.262.0550 Tuesday - Saturday 10-5:30pm