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Splitting Twilight - Kristin Baker |
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Written by Joe DiRosa
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November 05, 2009 — December 19, 2009
18 Wooster Street, New York
Splitting Twilight,
an exhibition of new paintings by Kristin Baker, opens at Deitch
Projects on November 5, 2009. Baker continues to push the
contradictions inherent in the genre of painting while simultaneously
celebrating its history. The new body of work playfully remixes the
legacy of landscape painting within a modernist structure.
Kristin Baker is bending painting’s seeming limitations. By
emphasizing the materiality of paint through her built up layers of
troweled acrylic, Baker’s paintings approach other two-dimensional
practices such as printmaking, photography and paper assemblage. While
upholding the power and dynamism of painting, Baker seeks to create a
third dimension in between many genres and hindered by none. Her
compositions combine illusionistic and pictorial space as well as
blatantly artificial forms and surfaces. Each mark and shape is created
not by a brush but by an outline of torn tape. The final silhouette is
filled in with paint, and when the tape is ripped away, a free-floating
“gesture” or “mark” is added to the piece. These shapes are layered
together to make forms and landscapes or scraped away to reveal the
colors underneath. Layers of these joints create tufts, grooves and
corrugated surfaces that approximate collage or even the planar
aggregation of 3D digital imaging techniques. Using scraping tools
Baker rubs, abrades and smoothes until the surface is like an x-ray of
the past.
Kristin Baker graduated from the School of the Museum of Fine Arts,
Boston and received a M.F.A. from Yale in 2002. This is her third solo
exhibition at Deitch Projects. She has been commissioned by the Denver
Art Museum to create an artwork responding to the Daniel Libskind
architecture. It will be featured in the exhibition Embrace! opening November 14th.
More information about:
Kristin Baker
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