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The Grand Tour M. Louise Stanley at Anglim/Trimble

The Grand Tour

M. Louise Stanley at Anglim/Trimble

With civil rights and freedom of the press in a precarious state these days, it’s a welcome break to step into the world of M. Louise Stanley, a painter whose work is inextricably intertwined with these ideals. Emeryville-based Stanley’s current show at Anglim/Trimble offers work spanning four decades. The title “The Grand Tour” evokes the ritual, popular from the 17th century onward, of undertaking an exhaustive journey to study the art treasures of Europe, particularly the classical antiquities of Italy, and reflects the fact that the artist has made this trek innumerable times, both on her own and as the leader of “art lovers tours.”

Pompeiian Villa 1984-85 acrylic on masonite, papier-mâché 114″ x 144″ x 56″

Entering the gallery, we are immediately drawn to an installation in the corner, Pompeiian Villa (1983-85). Using papier-mâché, masonite, and paint, Stanley creates a striking simulacrum of a classical portico, an imposing yet wistful image evoking a time long past. This installation, exhibited for the first time in 20 years, notably appeared at SFMOMA in 1986 in an ambitious group exhibition “Second Sight” curated by then museum-director Graham Beal. It was a heady time, and the villa glows with a sense of wonder, reflecting Stanley’s burgeoning love affair with Italy then recently kindled by her initial, NEA Grant-funded, solo tour.

Pygmaliana, 1984 oil, 24″ x 33″

Anchoring the installation is Pygmaliana (1984), an oil painting inset into the villa’s wall. Stanley’s alter-ego, a female artist clad in lime green capri pants and a red and white striped shirt, faces her canvas. A hulking/hunky male figure comes to life, echoing the statue in the Greek myth. Emerging from the canvas to enter three-dimensional space, his sudden animation—and sexual advances—startle both the wide-eyed painter and her companion, an arching tuxedo cat, who bristle in response. From the earliest works, her figurative impulse appears as the stylistic love-child of American Regionalism and Underground Comix. As a rule, these quirky figures inhabit contrasting settings, often breathtaking classical environments of dazzling complexity and virtuoso brushwork. It bears mentioning that Stanley developed an allergy to oil paint in the late 1980s; the need to learn to paint all over again proved to be a blessing in disguise, as her command of the medium of acrylic paint to convey nuance and tonal gradations is unrivaled.

Odysseus and the Sirens, 2016, acrylic, 66” x 50”

Lulu, as Stanley is routinely known, is obsessed by mythology. Her love of these tales of passion, revenge, and transformation infuses nearly every canvas with an otherworldly feeling, a reaching back to the past, to the stories which have informed the development of our Western civilization, and to the heavens, as she awaits inspiration from her muse. Odysseus and the Sirens (2017) depicts the Homeric tale of the sailor and his crew attempting to avoid shipwreck. As with all too many tales that inform our cultural heritage, women routinely get a bum rap. A feminist reframing of these legends is generally Stanley’s tack, although here the story hews close to the original. Tethered to the mast, Odysseus looks more than a bit uneasy, as do his hapless crew at the oars. Unearthly beings, in the form of gigantic female heads with tendrils of golden hair and diaphanous wings, emerge from the folds of the sails, as they attempt to lure the sailors to their doom.

Suffer the Little Children, 2010, gouache, 30″ x 22″

Stanley is never one to steer clear of controversy, and Suffer the Little Children (2010) tackles the issue of pedophilia in the Catholic church. A bemused tourist observes a trio of figures perched on a pedestal—a beneficent priest, sporting a halo, and two devoted young boys, making gestures of supplication. Like the tourist, we may feel supremely discomfited by the scene. The cathedral’s rich interior is beautifully rendered in glowing tones of green and gold, and our conflicted impulse reflects a mixture of attraction to the splendor and beauty of Renaissance art, yet a revulsion toward the corruption and attendant ills attached to its patronage.

Apparition, Venice, 2006, gouache, 28″ x 21″

An infectious sense of humor is one of the qualities that sustain the work, giving it a satiric bite harkening to Daumier or, a more contemporary match, the consummate Neo-Cubist Robert Colescott. As noted previously, (see “No Regrets” Articultures 2021) Stanley uses a parallel device, turning the tables on sexist caricatures, much as Colescott, a Black artist, did in his scathing critiques of racism. The solemnity, or perhaps pretension, of the settings often acts as a foil to startling vignettes of human drama. Apparition, Venice (2006), a case in point, displays a majestically ornate cathedral, a row of pews the backdrop for the unexpected appearance of a pair of glowing bare female legs encroaching on the aisle. Adjacent, in Gothic Revival, Barcelona (1997), towering, vertiginous vaulted arches attract a few tourists strolling through the darkened interior, as a shaft of light streams in on the decidedly secular scene of a woman changing a baby’s diaper. We may be shocked, or contemplate the idea of the divine within this “everybaby.”

Gothic Revival, Barcelona, 1997, gouache, 40″ x 26″

The exhibition’s title work, The Grand Tour (2023), is focused on a quintet of overweight, underdressed American tourists relaxing in the Piazza Navona. Using a recurring device, based on observation, she captures the groups’ fixation on their phones, rather the the majestic Fountain of Neptune—Stanley does not suffer fools gladly. We may recall our dismay at finding such ubiquitous, decidedly uncultured, tourists blocking our views at the Vatican, the Louvre, or the Prado, and Jean-Paul Sartre’s famous quote, “hell is other people.”

The Grand Tour, 2023, acrylic, 36″ x 44″

A handful of her remarkable travel journals are glimpsed in a vitrine in the rear of the gallery. These sketchbooks are among Lulu’s most remarkable works, her dedication to her craft, her draftsmanship, and the weight of the hours of time and energy expended on them, infuse these small objects with a talisman-like power. Here we most clearly sense her unshakable conviction in the redemptive power of paint.

Triumph of Flora, after Tiepolo, 2023, acrylic, 62″ x 80″

Most relevant to today’s circumstances, Triumph of Flora, after Tiepolo (2023) celebrates the tale, from Ovid’s Metamorphoses, of beings transformed into flowers; the 18th century original, The Empire of Flora, hangs in the Legion of Honor. Atop a sunlit hill, with a Golden-Gated city spread out below, a transgender Flora is drawn in a gilded chair by gleeful naked cherubs. With a Pride flag fluttering above, a joyful throng of diverse revelers, dancing and cavorting, enter the picture from the right, while tattooed bikers make an appearance on the left. Statuary includes a pair of sphinxes, creatures of ambiguous gender and species, an allusion to the idea of the potency of hybrid beings—an apt metaphor as well for Lulu’s own artwork, as it meshes seemingly incongruous genres of high and low art. A pairing of Tiepolo and Stanley would present a memorable scene at The Legion, a provocative yet perhaps natural spot for a larger survey of her classical appropriations.

A striking exhibit, “The Grand Tour” reveals a mature artist working at her best. With an abundance of interest in Stanley’s work, nearly universal acclaim at the critical level, and numerous, significant recent exhibitions on both coasts, her work is ripe for major institutional exposure. The trajectory of her future career, as Stanley herself would certainly attest, lies in the hands of The Fates.

Barbara Morris

M. Louise Stanley “The Grand Tour” will close Saturday, February 22 at Anglim/Trimble, SF.

hours: Tuesday-Saturday 11-5

Anglim/Trimble

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Cornelia Schulz Synthesis at Paul Thiebaud Gallery

“Ember,” 2024, oil on canvas over wood, 22 1/2 x 13 1/2 in. (detail)
Photos courtesy of Matthew Miller, Paul Thiebaud Gallery

Cornelia Schulz Synthesis at Paul Thiebaud Gallery

by Barbara Morris

San Francisco’s Paul Thiebaud Gallery presents Synthesis, a show of recent work by virtuoso painter Cornelia Schulz. While modest in scale, these works are expansive in energy, massing and bubbling under thick swaths of troweled-on paint. Schulz, with a BFA in painting and an MFA in welded steel sculpture—both from SFAI—has had an illustrious career as artist and educator. She has shown in major venues, received the prestigious SECA award, as well as pursuing a lengthy teaching career at UC Davis, among other institutions, from 1973 to 2002. Schulz chaired the Art Department at Davis from 1973 to 92, and again in 1995.

Schulz’s work has transcended boundaries to create objects one might view as painterly sculptures, or sculptural paintings. Here, Schulz works on unusual supports, compact, assertive forms which she constructs herself, this grouping of eleven works all using the shape of a rectangle as a point of departure. These are potent small paintings, ones in which the lengthy history of the bravura gesture is conveyed by sheer force of will. Formal elements combine and contrast, we witness an internal dialogue with Schulz displaying the blissful and/or excruciating interplay of gesture and decision making that is the working process of a painter.

“No Laughing Matter,” 2023, oil on canvas over wood, 22 x 13 in.

Schulz’s remarkable show is presented in two upstairs galleries, the first room holding five small, irregularly-shaped works hung at eye level. No Laughing Matter (2023) features a base color of dark hues, black and violet, tinged with bright flecks and splotches of red, orange, and green. Some areas are scraped down close to the support, as others roil and coagulate, like flows of lava stopped in mid-stream. A wide, cream-colored band oozes from the upper-right corner, acquiring a corrugated appearance where the motion of a wide trowel/scraper was repeatedly disrupted. The lower half is punctuated by an incised band, glowing and juicy, as hair-like tendrils of paint twist and writhe under our gaze. Despite the intimate scale, there is nothing subdued about this work, which crackles with intensity, reflecting decades of experience handling paint, and a muscularity born of comfort in the creation and destruction of energies, a synthesis of opposing forces.

“InterFray,” 2024, oil on canvas over wood, 20 1/4 x 13 1/2 in.

InterFray (2024) is a bit more subdued, almost demure, a wavy shape echoed in undulating paint, once again scraped with a wide tool into a colorful band with delicate stripes in warm, understated hues. Thick and sludgy encrustations in green and violet at the top disappear beneath this coating, the lower half emerging as a black surface disrupted here and there with bits of red and green, and trailing residue of the creamy surface above.

“Ember,” 2024, oil on canvas over wood, 22 1/2 x 13 1/2 in.

A back room features six more works by Schulz, along with an assortment of works by associates and colleagues from including her former husband, the late sculptor Robert Hudson, with whom she raised her family. The thickly-encrusted Ember (2024) continues in the palette of cream, green, red, and egg yolk yellow. It’s remarkable how powerful these small works are, with Schulz’s extensive experience as both painter and sculptor coming into play—the irregular shape of the supports sets us a bit off-kilter from the get go, and the wildly contrasting textures and energies, smooth, layered passages, cool geometric undergirding sharply incised lines, meet thrashed up messes of gooey and clotted shapes, their physicality reflecting the materials and processes that informed their construction. These works also have a seductive glimmer, a shiny, viscous appearance evoking an assortment of industrial materials (tar, grout) as well as biological fluids, such as the moist surface of a wet pink tongue suggested in the salmon color of Red Skirt (2022).

“Red Skirt,” 2022, oil on canvas over wood, 19 x 12 in.

Red Ralley (2023), with its emphasis on verticality, also evokes a tradition of the sublime at odds with the intimate scale of the work. We may reflect on predecessors in this vein, with a lengthy trajectory ranging from Albert Bierstadt’s paintings of Yosemite through Clyfford Still’s abstract interpretations of man confronting the majesty of nature. Once again, we are presented with a seeming conundrum, with an expansive feeling of majestic scope, compressed into a tiny package. Another merging of opposites.

“Red Ralley,” 2023, oil on canvas over wood, 23 x 14 in.

As art evolves, often away from the materials and processes that had defined it for centuries, we are often confronted with objects so anxious we may need a Paxil to enter the gallery. In this case, that expectation may be left at the door. These substantial pieces convey the best of 20th century painting practice, yet are very much of the moment. Here, like magic, the weighty history of painting is brought down to size, as Schulz posits that perhaps better doesn’t always have to mean bigger, the whole macho tradition of Abstract Expressionism defied by this intimate scale. For those who love paint, the mark of the brush, and the energy of the gesture, a visit to Paul Thiebaud will be richly rewarding.

Cornelia Schulz Synthesis on view at Paul Thiebaud Gallery through January 11, 2025.

Paul Thiebaud Gallery

hours: Tuesday – Saturday, 10 am to 6 pm

please note gallery will be closed for the Winter Break from December 23 to January 6, 2025

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Grace Munakata Biology of Flight at Anglim/Trimble

Grace Munakata, Curious Cloud, 2022, Acrylic, wax pastel on panel, 37 1/2 x 48 in.

Grace Munakata “Biology of Flight” at Anglim/Trimble

How does one define “abstract art?” Some feel that an abstract painting should not include any recognizable objects, while others suggest that it is the conceptual underpinning of a work, the way in which the artist approaches the canvas, that makes it abstract, rather than the eventual presence, or absence, of objects. The late John Baldessari, an influential multi-disciplinary artist and art professor, presented an interesting exercise to his students at UC San Diego. Each was given an abstract image, one completely devoid of any discernible objects, with the assignment to go find and photograph this image in the real world. Almost without exception, the students were successful.

Falling squarely into the realm of abstract work grounded in reality is that of painter Grace Munakata, whose current exhibition “Biology of Flight” at Anglim/Trimble presents a range of small and medium-scaled paintings, collages, and works on paper and panel. Munakata studied at UC Davis under Wayne Thiebaud, who became a mentor and friend. In a 2001 interview with Manneti Shrem Museum’s Associate Curator Susie Kantor in conjunction with the exhibition Wayne Thiebaud Influencer a New Generation, Munakata recalled Thiebaud’s belief that “painting is an intellectual inquiry, finding out about as many aspects of human experience as possible,” and his description of the studio as “a shared laboratory for experience.” Munakata went on to a her own distinguished career as a professor, teaching at Cal State East Bay (formerly Cal State Hayward) as well as sustaining a remarkable visual art practice.

Munakata grew up in the Central Valley, into a Nisei Japanese family which had endured internment during World War II. Her family’s experience undoubtedly colored her perceptions of the world, suggesting it as a place of mixed signals and shifting planes. Her mother was a seamstress, and the influence of her love of fabric, the feeling of swatches of different material and patterns, is clearly felt, as well as the influence of different cultures coming together. Descriptions of her family home include images of her father creating sumi-e works on the kitchen table, her mother spreading fabric and patterns on the floor, and décor ranging from gestural senryu poetry panels and elaborate Japanese dolls in lacquered boxes, to an Asian version of Santa Claus, all mixed in with a painting of the Golden Gate Bridge. With an eclectic mix of aesthetics, one senses in the work her openness to inspiration and source material of all kinds.

Curious Cloud (2022) hinges on an amorphous violet shape, the cloud, just left of center. Other forms may or may not suggest additional clouds, mountains, trees, or other natural forms. A rough oval is bisected into a rust orange on one side, the other broken into a floral pattern in blue-violet, cream, and yellow. An underlying checkerboard makes a subtle allusion to the Minimalist grid, and the Hofmannesque push and pull of the forms on the picture plane draw our eye in and out. What draws one into the work initially, in addition to it’s glorious color, are the dazzling visual pyrotechnics of her many overlapping compositional devices. We may think of the work of Julie Mehretu, using more hard-edged, architecturally-inspired images to construct a visual field of similar complexity and depth. Mt. Govardan and Wilson’s Snipe (2023) uses a similar strategy, balancing objects with the non-objective, careful rendering here and there, particularly of the bird, and washy patches of color. Contrasts of light and dark, blurry and focused, keep us engaged and create a satisfying sense of mystery.

Grace Munakata, Mt. Govardan and Wilson’s Snipe, 2023, Acrylic, wax pastels on panel
36 x 47 in.

Harbuz, 7 X Down, 8 X Up (2023), inhabited by insistent bumblebees, smiling pumpkins, and frowning gnomes, immerses us in the realms of fairy tale and fantasy, with a specific reference to Sankaku “Triangle” Daruma, Japanese dolls symbolizing resilience. Munikata displays an enduring playful spirit and willingness to, as Thiebaud advised, embrace the ridiculous, even to “risk artistic suicide.” Among her diverse practices and strategies, she also cites the importance of randomness and the gestural impulse.

Grace Munakata, Harbuz, 7 x Down, 8 x Up, 2023, Acrylic, wax pastels on panel
41 x 48 in.

Munakata also presents many smaller paintings and collages without distinct objects, “pure abstractions,” which are intensely satisfying. Deep in the Ground (2021) presents rich yet muted colors and quirky shapes overlaid with careful tracings of pattern dancing across the panel. The joyous collage Susan’s Circus (2019) offers deep purple and brilliant yellow bands anchoring an irregular rectangle; playful dots suggest balls and juggling, as well as the yin-yang symbol.

With art a highly subjective realm, ultimately abstraction, like beauty, may lie in the eye of the beholder. As with many attempts to define or quantify aesthetic qualities, words fall short of experience. In the work of Munakata, a mixture of influences and techniques, layers of imagery and gestural marks, combine in satisfying compositions highly abstract—yet suggesting a diaristic record of a life of intellectual inquiry.

Barbara Morris

Grace Munakata “Biology of Flight” will close Saturday, December 23 at Anglim/Trimble, SF.

Anglim/Trimble