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A DIALOGUE
By
Van Stokes
There
is much I know about the artist Xela from his images. They are full of
color, wit, history and irreverence. But today we sit down so that I
might investigate further.
"I began
my career as a political cartoonist,"
he
says as we order an espresso. He admits to a preference for candor and a
weakness for the light-hearted.
Xela
becomes animated as he speaks about painting and history. He describes
personal inspirations through an intriguing mix of people, events and
the nobility of everyday life.
Xela's
anecdotes conjure up fascinating word pictures. His convictions are
stated with great lust for life but also an appreciation of subtlety.
Much like his artwork, his words are redemptive in spirit.
We
discuss the Bauhaus and its lessons on the psychology of seeing. "But
it's also about letting the sun into the room," says Xela with a smile.
And
this is true. Klee, Albers, Kandinsky, Itten and Xela all create art as
a phenomenological gift - a graceful combination of the physical and the
psychological.
These
are the simple elegant tenets of modern picture making found in Xela's
work. His paintings are refreshingly free of post-modern verbiage and
appropriated this and that.
Still,
the work engages a dialogue of signs and symbols - one that embraces its
subject rather than deconstructs it.
He
begins with drawings that are later transformed into an industrial vinyl
skin. The result is a collage of authoritative flat shapes. It is a
rigorous construct that formally binds his work.
In the
paintings
"Berlin Kulturforum 1"
and "Berlin Kulturforum 2,"
Xela explores the formal and subjective dynamic of Berlin's Kulturforum,
constructed of warehouse forms as painted statements of progressive
architecture.
Xela's
relationship to the forms is remarkable as both painter and Bauhaus
proponent.
"Kulturforum
1" depicts the cool geometric landscape of the buildings that house the
institutions, while
"Kulturforum
2" injects the subject matter with a befitting Bauhaus-inspired
non-objective quality. There is a lively push-pull of figure-ground,
geometric shapes and furious architectural line that almost obscures the
subject matter.
Works
like "United(?) Nations"
depict nations and global unity in an almost humorous light. On top of a
late-cubist puzzle of brightly hued colors reside over a thousand drawn
faces.
Xela's view of the world replaces
division with overlap, clarity with creative liberty, and individualism
with pleasant likeness. It is a marvelous exercise in displaying
co-existence as an innately human desire. Xela's perspective leaves the
viewer chuckling at the state of the world rather than pondering
divisive issues.
One formal and conceptual
step away from "United(?) Nations" is Xela's "Demographics."
This painting combines concepts of communal structure with field
painting. Order, anomaly and Gestalt space are practiced with excellent
results. Subtle unit forms comprise a plastic whole.
The title "Demographics" clarifies
the relationship of shapes to individual people. There is continuity
with small sections of difference. Shapes are created casually in a
Matissean fashion , but their raison d'etre is born of Xela's own
vision.
The painting "Sunrise" is a
distilled dose of Xela's
core sensibilities - powerful color and line applied to recreate
familiar subject matter. With just three generous skeins of color as
ground, a horizon and an evening time atmosphere are denoted. With all
the allure of commercial signage, but with an equally attractive economy
of means, Xela's shapes live like a bit of deja vu of Sunrises/Sunsets
past.
Evoking a West Coast landscape and breezy windblown dunes, a simple
swath of brown become terra firma. A rolling strip of fuchsia peaks over
the horizon as the sun dips. The fine orchestration of basic shape
transforms a few forms into a greater whole. "Sunrise" slows down Xela's
fast-paced gesture into a carefully timed pictorial respite.
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Likewise,
works like "Chesapeake Bay Bridge," "Grand Canyon,"
and "Continental Divide"
make use of a similar elongation of form. These works mimic the vast
depth or horizontal expanse of the subject matter.
Over
six feet in length and height, they use monumental scale to represent
grandeur. The pieces exhibit Xela's talent for capturing drawn forms on
a large scale. Xela magnifies the immediacy and hidden expression that
exists in many drawings but disappears in much painting.
He resurrects the power of expressionist
drawing as a large-scale art form in "Chesapeake Bay Bridge" and
"Continental Divide." Both works capture a loose synthesis of gesture
and landscape rarely seen in works on their size. Each piece contains
the wonderful stream of conscious mark making that happens between an
artist and a piece of paper, but is rarely carried over into larger
work.
In pared down works like
"Malum, Malum, Malum & Malum,"
Xela uses an elegant economy of means reminiscent of Mu Chi's "Six
Persimmons." Both paintings depict round fruit on a blank ground. The
works' sparseness highlight repetition, bare spatial representation, and
the visual effect of primal form. Xela updates Mu Chi's painterly
concern with a wholly modern space. He replaces austerity of "Six
Persimmons" with the optical impact of hard-edged modernism. The
painting exhibits an appreciation of flat modern form as a vehicle for
both painterly and popular expression.
Overly touching on his modernist
underpinnings, Xela pays tribute to three forefathers of modernist
painting: Klimt, Beckmann and Schiele in
"Genius X 3."
He makes a confident brushy tribute to these artists. All artists are
incarnated in their trademarked style. There is Klimt wearing a
colorfully patterned robe. Beckmann appears staunchly in a tuxedo
holding a cigarette and Schiele in a contorted gaze; both Beckmann and
Schiele's poses are reference of the artists' respective self-portraits.
The work is an ironic tribute to the painters whose stylistic liberties
provocatively transformed others.
"1942 Wannsee/Wahnsee/Blutsee" is a
political
departure for Xela. Here, he applies a
unique visual vocabulary to subject matter that is typically out of
character for Xela.
The title is a play on German words
referring to the Berlin suburb by that name, the sheer insanity of the
second word and a reference to the sea of blood that emanated from this
building.
Xela
depicts the Wannsee resort mansion where the Holocaust killing machine
was designed in detail. He shows the scenic mansion in its bucolic
setting on the lake in harsh black and white against a blood soaked sea
and spilling over into the driveway. The portrayal of Wannsee presents
the especially disturbing psychology of brutalism married with leisure.
The painting's photographic nature adds a poignant political directness
to the image and dimension to Xela's oeuvre.
In "Ideas Percolating," Xela returns to
art for art's sake. Using a quintessential Jackson Pollock drip, he
replaces the existential with the colorful and the meta-narrative with
the humorous anecdote. Executed in a format similar to Pollock's "Autumn
Rhythm," it is a playful take on the "artist as tortured genius," and
the mythology of the abstract expressionist movement.
"Ideas Percolating" introduces color to a
language
of nihilism. He replaces strenuous de facto standards of abstraction
with a sense of rejuvenation. The farcical and naturally absurd is
contextualized with shots of bright primary hue.
In this way, much of Xela's art is a
generous and provocative creation. He indiscriminately reframes objects
with a fanciful optimism and flies in the face of precedent.
One may find anything in looking at his
work, except perhaps a sense of pessimism. More common is a lively and
colorful rapport with even the most banal of subjects.
The work is all-inclusive and
overwhelmingly cheerful. Even dreary subjects appear welcoming.
Confident gesture, a crisp sense of color
and keen observation transform the quotidian into refined works of art.
Van Stokes writes
on art and visual literacy for publications including Artis Spectrum,
Good Use and Spinnings. He has taught Visual Thinking and Foundation
Design at Mercy College in White Plains, NY. Since leaving Yale with an
MFA, he has contributed art and writing to numerous shows in New York
City.
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