Sep 10th 2010

Philip Hanson: The Subtle Diagram and Michiko Itatani: Cosmic Wanderlust

@ Corbett vs. Dempsey

1120 N Ashland Ave, Chicago, IL 60622

Opening Friday, September 10th, from 5PM - 9PM

On view through Saturday, October 16th

Philip Hanson unveils a group of new paintings and drawings incorporating poetry by several writers, primarily Emily Dickinson but also William Blake, William Shakespeare and Gerard Manley Hopkins.

For the last fifteen years, Hanson has explored the intersection of painting and text. Where many artists have approached this nexus in a reductive way—think of Ed Ruscha or Christopher Wool—Hanson has thrown himself headlong into a veldt of words, color and form, opting for vibrancy and a daunting visual complexity. This is an important new body of work by one of the most highly personal Chicago artists to emerge as part of the Imagist movement in the 1960s; Hanson continues to push his ideas in their investigation of color vibration, allusive connotation, and compositional density. Four of these works mark a return to large format painting—arguably Hanson’s most daring and accomplished works to date—while each of the smaller oils packs the wallop of a big canvas. Streaming banners, seashell forms, floral and crystalline shapes, and impossible color gradations are all part of the program, as well as the visual diagramming of language that gives the show its title. The intricacy of Hanson’s compositions is particularly evident in his recent drawings, which utilize graphite and acrylic gouache and which maintain a more reduced, sometimes monochromatic color palette.

In CvsD’s East Wing, we are proud to present Cosmic Wanderlust, an exhbition of 50 paintings by Michiko Itatani, one of the gallery’s favorite artists. We have taken to subtitling the show “miniature Itatani,” as these works are uncharacteristically tiny (the smallest weigh in at 5″ square), each one its own complete cosmos, part of an interrelated series of images based on fantastic intergalactic libraries (Itatani calls these “hyper-baroque”) and a magical nighttime woodland scene (Moon-Light/Mooring) with rings of mysterious illuminated globes that appear in both series. This is the first time Itatani has presented small works independent of larger multi-panel installations. How does CvsD have room for 50 paintings in the wee East Wing? You’ve got to see to believe!

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