Kent Michael Smith

Art Ltd. Magazine REVIEW

Posted on September 18, 2013

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"New Work From Kansas City" at Carrie Secrist Gallery
by james yood
Sep 2013



Boundary
2013
Kent Michael Smith
Acrylic, glitter and resin on panel
16" x 16"
Photo: courtesy the artist and Carrie Secrist Gallery

Count me among those who believe that when the next big thing happens in the visual arts--and please, let it be soon!--it's going to come from someplace like Liverpool or Bergamo or Nanchang or Kansas City. While the rule for recent centuries was that it helped artists to live in New York, Paris, London, Tokyo, etc., that such cities were hotbeds of cultural discourse, providing a milieu where artists would collectively thrive (and that places like Kansas City were provincial outposts guaranteeing mediocrity), today places like LA and Berlin seem so burdened by the art market and art world careerist histrionics as to render them mannerist and curiously conformist, and to discourage individuality or personal vision.

Let's not burden these three artists from Kansas City with too much responsibility for the future of the visual arts. This exhibition was not about all of Kansas City, it simply showed three artists who interest Carrie Secrist, and whose independence and willingness to hunker down on visual ideas that intrigue them reflects their experiences in a city that's not unlike Goldilocks' porridge. Kansas City is just right, not too hot, not too cold, it has great museums and art schools, it's urban and has a solid art community, but it's decompressed, a place where you can pursue your visions at your own pace, where you don't worry too much about Documenta or the Turner Prize, or who did or didn't get reviewed in art ltd.

Anne Lindberg is a fastidious oscillator. Her patiently and somewhat obsessively drawn works made of thousands of hand-drawn, parallel vertical lines of graphite and colored pencils reflect that Midwestern work ethic, that mania for strict control and yet idiosyncratic effect that marks so much art from this region. Paul Anthony Smith, originally from Jamaica, performs what he calls "picotage" on photographic prints, using a ceramic tool to scrape and pin-prick away, also obsessively, also hundreds or thousands of times, mostly at the figures in these curious images, making them gritty and ghostlike, reintroducing ambiguity and mystery into the specificity of photography. And Kent Michael Smith slathers on clear resin like he's got it on tap, layering fragments of colorful abstract shapes within this viscous shiny aqueous ooze that makes his work transparently sedimentary; you see disparate pastel-like layers embalmed in a syrup as in some primordial pool that makes good abstract compositions. They are three fine artists working away in a place that's anything but provincial--after all, there's a Manhattan in Kansas too.

Categories: reviews, press

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New American Paintings article...

Posted on June 25, 2013

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New Work From Kansas City at Carrie Secrist Gallery by New American Paintings

An effort to define “Midwestern Painting” has been a major topic of discussion lately – not a quite debate, but definitely an inquiry.  Carrie Secrist’s recent exhibition New Work from Kansas City, featuring work by Anne Lindberg, Kent Michael Smith, and Paul Anthony Smith, foregrounds an emphasis on site and contemporary practice in the Midwest.  While the press release pushes against a read of “regionalism”, the exhibition suggests otherwise – though perhaps this ever-present theme of region is symptomatic of a larger condition concerning a rise in questioning Midwestern “standards” for a definition toward “painting,” the term.  Strung together by a loose thread of abstraction, the exhibition features the artists’ differences as opposed to their similarities.  Far from being a negative thing, New Work from Kansas City highlights some very prevalent issues in what it means to put together exhibitions with a Midwestern slant today in Chicago. – Stephanie Cristello, Chicago Contributor

 

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Anne Lindbergparallel 39, 2013, graphite and colored pencil on cotton mat board, 58 x 51 inches,Courtesy the artist and Carrie Secrist Gallery, Chicago

 

While the exhibition speaks to themes of regionalism, the experience of looking at the three very distinct bodies of work, by three very conceptually and formally different artists, is varied and refreshing.  Contrary to my expectations, the visual gaps between the bodies of work are celebrated in the gallery space in terms of installation, and are perhaps the exhibition’s greatest strength.  The collection of predominantly large to medium scale works also propose a reversal to what one might expect – monumental sized drawings by Lindberg that are anything but preparatory, Kent Michael Smith’s deeply layered resin cast paintings that at first appear flat and graphic, and Paul Anthony Smith’s altered photographs that seem to be covered in glitter, though the effect is merely a simple material treatment of little tears in the surface of the paper.  Spanning across three different mediums alone causes the exhibition to resist a coherent aesthetic that would flatten the concept of the show, which is after all to feature the work.  The exhibition is not “easy” in that regard – not easy to talk about, because the artist’s trajectories appear oppositional, but also because the very foundation of the premise takes the concept of regional site, often treated a unifying factor, to displace an inherent connection in favor of something more autonomous.

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Kent Michael Smithanchor, 2012, acrylic, resin and spray paint on panel, 40 x 40 inches, Courtesy the artist and Carrie Secrist Gallery, Chicago

Although the works are flat, Lindberg’s drawings feel sculptural in their slow and carefully mediated graphite lines – somewhere between a more visually kinetic Agnes Martin and the interference on a TV screen.  Capturing what resemble subtle moirés of light, there is something familiar, though pointedly not domestic, about the images on the surface of the pristine white paper – like the effect that occurs when two semi-transparent scrims of fabric alter their visual patterns in passing, sheer curtains in a motel.  The drawings reference an installation that also took place at the gallery in 2012, where threads of aqua, green, and pale blue Egyptian cotton were diagonally stretched across the corner of a wall, occupying space in a similarly elusive manner.  Equally as tactile, Lindberg’s drawings elaborate on her ability to create fragile circumstances out of commonplace materials. The effect of the many clustered lines that make up the final pattern of the “image” is like a textile, perhaps as much as the actual thread piece itself. Lindberg’s lines weave a cloth out of pencil – a drapery that could at any moment unweave at the delicate touch of an eraser.

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Paul Anthony Smith | Port Antonio Market #1, 2013, Unique picotage on C-print with spray paint, 30 x 20 inches, Courtesy the artist and Carrie Secrist Gallery, Chicago

Staging a similar material circumstance is Paul Anthony Smith’s photographs, treated with a term coined “picotage,” in which the surface layer of the paper that holds the ink is lifted up and partially torn away by a sharp ceramics tool.  While the surface treatment slightly obscures the image, the picture remains – resembling instead a luminescent overlay, or a glittering interference of light more so than an actual intervention of the image.  The imagery appears to take advantage of this partially masking context; Smith applies the picotage directly and noticeably as a pop outline in the photographs, which exclusively picture African-American figures against non-descript vernacular or domestic backdrops.  Every surface of the bodies within the pictures are torn away, with the exception of the eyes and mouth, and the surroundings are left untouched, like theatrical backdrops.  While the masking effort is made to reference sacrificial masks and African ancestry, it more poignantly speaks to the subjective material treatment of the figures within the portraits themselves.  One cannot help but question why the figure is forced into such a dual context, which is both violent and shimmering, depending on your distance.

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Kent Michael Smith | Growth, 2013, Acrylic, resin and spray paint on panel 14 x 14 inches, Courtesy the artist and Carrie Secrist Gallery, Chicago

Kent Michael Smith’s multi-layered combinations of graphic forms against gestural abstract planes offer a stark difference in volume, both visually and physically.  Like looking into a shadow box, the process of the painting literally exposes itself through its depth; each film of paint is visibly suspended in resin at the location of when that mark was made.  The bold colors of the implacable stacked forms clash with more sketchy backgrounds that look as though they have been buried under panes of glass, the last layers often framing a border of what resembles sparkled custom car paint – essentially functioning on the level of a monochrome, in excess.  The paintings offer a counterpoint to how we can read the regional slant of this collection of work, where site is just one process in a system of many, and each artist exists autonomously within a deeper layered system of exchange.

Anne Lindberg is a 2011 Joan Mitchell Foundation grantee. Her exhibition history includes projects with the Nevada Museum of Art, Reno; Bemis Center for Contemporary Arts, Omaha; Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art, Kansas City, and Bom Retiro Cultural Center, Sao Paulo, Brazil.

Recent exhibitions for Kent Michael Smith include the Lawrence Arts Center, Lawrence, KS and Kansas State University, Manhattan. His work is included in public collections such as the Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art, Kansas City; Emporia State University, Emporia, KS; and Ohio University, Athens. 



Paul Anthony Smith is the recipient of a 2013 Charlotte Street Foundation Visual Artist Award and a 2013 ArtsKC Inspiration grant. Following his debut solo exhibition with ZieherSmith, New York in early 2013, Smith was named by Huffington Post as one of the 30 best Contemporary Black Artists Under 40.

Categories: exhibitions, reviews