> DESCRIPTION
Gallery 415 is pleased to present the recent work by the Brazilian-born
painter, photographer, and mixed-media artist Silvia Poloto. A prolific
artist who has shown in an impressive list of venues during her career.
She will be showing not only the lyrical abstractions on canvas for
which she is best known, but also a series of recent multimedia works
on wood entitled Absence - Presence; these pieces combine painting with
digital imagery, both found and manufactured, in order to reflect on
the psychology of illness and mortality. While the new works take on
the serious themes of classical art, they retain Poloto's masterly
command of color, gesture and texture; they are sumptuously beautiful
improvisations that have come together from the disparate elements
filling the artist's studio through the agency of Poloto's intuition --
her perfect visual pitch.
The mixed-media Observations paintings are brilliantly colored but
modulated fields of acrylic paint inhabited by an assortment of visual
events: sweeping brushstrokes in black and white, meandering lines,
grids of dots, poured squiggles, and scrubbed-in blobs. They are
reminiscent of various Abstract Expressionist painters -- Miro,
Baziotes, Rothko, Motherwell, and Tapies-- but this is a synthesis that
creates its own world. A variety of marks is presented close up to the
picture plane in front of an aqueous, shadowy mass of color, as if
floating on waves or emerged from chaos, but drifting slightly; a sense
of temporality and change emerges from the sometimes odd and ambiguous
shapes, which seem to breathe.
The new Absence - Presence mixed-media works on wood with resin combine
Poloto's painting with enlarged photographs of details of common (but
unidentified) objects. The works, generally door-sized, hint at
transcendence and transformation, combining the beauty of her painterly
color and gesture with the submerged emotional content of the
photographic work to suggest an infinite or mystical vision revealing
the eternal and the temporal as interpenetrating and complementary. Art
critic Terri Cohn writes: "Poloto consistently savors the play between
the power of the photographic images she uses, the gestural, abstract
ground she paints around them, and the gridded compositional format
that holds the two in dialogue with each other." For the artist,
objects and field, figure and ground are equivalent -- merely different
states of matter.
Robert Rauschenberg famously said that he wanted to work in the gap
between art and life, and many contemporary artists followed his lead
-- not just in incorporating a miscellany of objects and media in their
work, but also demystifying the artistic process from romantic
inspiration to open-ended experimentation. Such an esthetic demands not
just a fearless openness to stimuli and ideas, but also the visual
imagination and instincts to refine the daily chaos into an ordered
esthetic beauty. Poloto, an electrical engineer by training discovered
her knack for visual communication almost by chance, possesses both
qualities in abundance. Pursuing her art education independently, she
picked up metalworking, painting, video and photographic skills as she
needed them -- "Nothing could stop me," she says. She remembers
somewhat wryly, however, that after welding metal sculptures out of
creative compulsion, she discovered a book on Abstract Expressionist
sculptor David Smith, and in it, her unknown artistic ancestors.
That slight reinvention of the wheel aside, however, Poloto's career
has been extremely successful. Her sculpture, paintings and assemblages
that have been exhibited in France, Spain, Italy, Germany, Egypt,
Greece, Bulgaria, Jordan, Romania, China, and the United Arab Emirates
as well as the United States in Dallas, Portland, Chicago, Park City,
Los Angeles, Seattle, Miami, New York City and, of course, San
Francisco. Bay Area venues displaying her work include the DeYoung
Museum, where she was an artist in residence, the Italian-American
Museum, and Yerba Buena Center for the Arts. Her work resides in eighty
corporate collections and more than nine hundred private collections.
She has won many prizes and awards and has been featured in many
publications. This is her first exhibition with Gallery 415.