An essay by Anna McNay on the occasion of Julie Umerle's solo exhibition 'Rewind' at Art Bermondsey Project Space, London
31 August - 10 September 2016
Drift III. Julie Umerle © Julie Umerle |
Transoxide III. Julie Umerle © Julie Umerle |
Drift III (2016), for example, is a
reworking of an earlier piece that got damaged. Attempting to recapture what it
was she loved about the previous work, Umerle has, nevertheless, both subtly
repositioned the looming black shapes, and, per force, submitted to the will of
gravity and the pull of the paint itself as it drips down the canvas. Here, as
is also the case for Naples Orange (2013)
and Buff Titanium (2013), the drips
result directly from the pressure of the brush as it is swept across the softly
coloured, divided ground – an interesting contrast in terms of direct contact
to the remote mark-making of the Transoxide
series’ flicking approach, treading that fine line between directing what you
want the paint to do and letting it do its own thing; between precision and
chance.
The Rewind series (2014-16) sets out to
isolate and refine the marks from the Drift
paintings, positioning them tightly within the square frame of an unprimed
canvas, exploiting the pictorial space to the max. With the omission of the
drips, the process is obliterated, and the mark-making becomes defined instead by
technique. Similarly, the loss of action asserts both the flat forms and the
flatness of the canvas itself. This is, as Charles Harrison termed it,
‘painterliness, freed of depicting function’.3 First in black, and
then, in the later paintings, in red, the series invites the viewer to hit the
pause button and observe in still meditation. With the black shapes, it is like
looking through space, aiming towards infinity, while, in contrast, the red
shapes appear to jump forwards, escaping the pictorial frame and entering the
viewer’s own personal space. As the ‘painter of black’, Pierre Soulages, said:
‘It’s important to experience aesthetic shock, which sets in motion our
imagination, our emotions, our feelings, and our thoughts. That’s the purpose
of a painting and of art in general.’4 Umerle certainly achieves
this, both by her stripping bare of these shapes – revealing the ‘nakedness’
that Robert Motherwell attributed to abstract art – and by the large scale of
many of her works, which seem to shout out to you, compelling you to stop and
look, engaging you in what Mark Rothko described as ‘an immediate transaction’,
drawing you in ‘to create a state of intimacy’.5
Early in her
career, Umerle was advised by Robert Ryman to avoid naming her works after
feelings and, indeed, she describes her feelings as being shut off when she is at
work, as she becomes engrossed in the creative process. Viewers’ responses are
always subjective, and any associations they make, be they figurative or
emotional, are entirely their own. The black Rewind triptych offers something of an enigma code, suggesting an
order in which the hieroglyphs might be read, inviting the viewer to attempt an
interpretation. Take note, however, that, as with the Holy Trinity, each of
these three entities might be more than one thing at once and, overall, no
satisfactory understanding might be attained: it is, perhaps, equally a matter
of submission and belief.
Just as
Motherwell saw his work in terms of ‘a dialectic between the conscious
(straight lines, designed shapes, weighted colours, abstract language) and the
unconscious (soft lines, obscured shapes, automatism)
resolved into a synthesis which differs as a whole from either’6, so
Umerle’s work treads a similar path, proving that formal and spontaneous
procedures are not necessarily incompatible and that mark-making truly is both
a means to an end and an end in itself.
Rewind II. Julie Umerle © Julie Umerle |
Buff Titanium. Julie Umerle © Julie Umerle |
Anna McNay,
July 2016
© Anna McNay
© Anna McNay
Notes:
1. Kelly Baum, ‘Rothko to Richter/ Mark-Making in Abstract Painting
from the Collection of Preston H. Haskell, Class of 1960.’ Essay to accompany
the exhibition of the same name at Princeton
University Art Museum, 2014. Available online at: http://artmuseum.princeton.edu/story/rothko-richter-mark-making-abstract-painting-collection-preston-h-haskell-class-1960
[Accessed 18/07/16]
2. Harold Rosenberg, ‘The
American Action Painters’, 1952, reprinted in Ellen G Landau (ed), Reading Abstract Expressionism. Context and
Critique, Yale University Press, 2005, pp189-197, p190
3. Charles Harrison, ‘Abstract
Expressionism’ in Tony Richardson & Nikos Stangos (eds), Concepts of Modern Art, Penguin, 1974,
pp168-210, p172
4. Zoe Stillpass, interview with
Pierre Soulages in Interview magazine,
published 05/08/14. Available online at:
http://www.interviewmagazine.com/art/pierre-soulages/#_ [Accessed 18/07/16]
5. Mark Rothko, from excerpts from a lecture given at
the Pratt Institute in 1958, noted by Dore Ashton and published in Cimaise, December 1958. Cited in
Harrison (1974), p195
6. From a statement in Sidney
Janis, Abstract and Surrealist Art in
America, New York, 1944, cited in Harrison (1974), p170