ART-PRESENTATION: John McAllister-Riot rose summery
John McAllister’s works show a awareness of the history of painting, as well as the complicated relationship between painting and photography. McAllister is known for his large-scale paintings and panoramas that touch on the histories of Modernism, Fauvism, and Postmodernism. The optical intensity of the arrangement of surface, pattern, decoration and lapidary forms construct lean layers of highly impacted spaces.
By Dimitris Lempesis
Photo: Almine Rech Gallery
“riot rose summery”, is an exhibition of new paintings by John McAllister. Drawing from the artist’s ability to forge new connections between past and present, pattern and depth, the large rectangular works crop views from irradiated, frosted interiors. As the title of the show suggests, super heightened images give rise to bold experiments. The palette restricted to a few vibrant colors (pink, lavender and periwinkle blue), evoke suspension, reverie, and a kind of night vision. With this series, McAllister continues to build on previous works, sights set on landscapes and interiors, and the interplay therein. The paintings play with notions of what might be pleasurable and what might be discomfiting. McAllister puts surfaces into play with one another which create moments of release and contraction. Influenced by the likes of Matisse, Bonnard and Braque, he draws much inspiration from the history of painting, but reassembles those quoted moments to the world of the relativity of objects and contexts. Against these surfaces, geometrical non-realities bump up against familiar images like patterns, plants and trees in order to defamiliarize them through unusual perspectives, modulated surfaces, and a surprising array of tones. The principal planes are colored masses with the contour of objects pinned down to the surface of a perfect silhouette: synthetic, sculptural and spontaneous, the image looks intoxicated. The apparitional images are informed by a complex index of views (naturalistic, realistic, touristic, photographic and urban) strongly influenced by what might be utterly sublime. The views are superimposed upon one another, enclosed in a series of painted events. The compositions generate a continuous conjuring of planes and landscapes that evoke places, objects, and perspectives. Highly metaphorical, the contemporary overlay describes what might not be a landscape or an interior at all.
Info: Almine Rech Gallery, Abdijstraat 20 Rue de l’Abbaye, Brussels, Duration: 10/3-14/4/16, Days & HoursL Tue-Sat 10:00-19:00, www.alminerech.com

