Rudolf Stingel's Vineyard Paintings in their inaugural exhibition in London are exquisite. In the spacious, light drenched space of Gagosian's Grosvenor Hill Gallery, the eleven sumptuous works of oil and enamel on canvas sing out loud. The identically-sized abstract works were apparently painted when Stingel was surrounded by the vineyards, trees, and all natural landscape at Martha's Vineyard (off the coast of the US state of Massachusetts). Despite their inspiration, these works are focussed on the interaction of paint and fabric creating spaces that are placeless. The paintings could just as easily be depictions of a view from an aeroplane window on a flight over European mountains in summer.
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Rudolf Stingel, Vineyard Paintings Installation View |
The paintings are executed by spraying paint over fabric, gold over thick green enamel. Or is it the other way around? Is the green over gold? It's not possible to say, simply that the green is vibrant, sometimes electric, at others, wounded by brown. Every hue and tone of green is dancing around these canvases: lime green, evergreen, and of course, the green of grass, leaves, young sap on a tree.
Perhaps the most astonishing aspect of Stingel's paintings is their transformation in the light. Depending on where we stand in relationship to them, how the sun is moving across the sky, and the angles from which its rays fall through windows, the colours are always on the move. Also thanks to the shimmer qualities of gold, individual paintings dance for our eyes. Like old masters paintings in Stingel's native Italy, the gold is resplendent, glistening and glowing in interaction with space in the changing light of day. Settling before a painting, we start to see the wind in the trees, the dense foliage, as if from a flight path above. At a distance, they become darker, more brooding, less resplendent, but are always changing. At a distance from the canvas, the works are balanced in a different way, not all over abstractions. The green directs the eye, seeping through gold like water in crevices, or mountain tops peeking through golden clouds.
The gallery flyer talks about Stingel's exploration of the relationship between nature and abstract painting. Well yes, of course, like so many other abstract painters, Stingel has been influenced by the abstractions of nature. Nevertheless, there is also something domestic about these works. The fabric covering the canvases before they are sprayed might remind of crumpled bedsheets and things undone, relationships in a flurry, emotions removed from visibility, rustling beneath the surface. The works are are textured, tempting to touch, as if they are a textile rather than the rich medium of gold paint and enamel. Alternatively, the works also remind of screens with their sensuous fabric ground, a swipe that looks to have been left by a brush, taking the viewer out of the dream world of sleep or nature in motion.