THE CANVAS - APRIL 2008
By Carl Little
Dodd, Frederick, Knock, Baker & Palmer
In the best of painters there is a balance
between content and technique—the subject and the chosen means to present it
are in sync. Each canvas is the culmination of a life spent responding to the
world, yet each is also a step toward a new fulfillment of both the artist’s
vision and the viewer’s perpetual wonder at what is being expressed on the
picture plane.
The five artists showcased here, all of whom are
at different places in their lives and careers, have developed signature styles
to accompany the subject matter they have made their own. A nude with
wheelbarrow, motel units in deep twilight, a dock with purling water, a
domestic odalisque, an imaginary vista—the subjects are as wide-ranging as the
styles these painters have developed to render them.
Lois Dodd:
Reinventing the Real
In 1998, during a summer that proved too hot to
work outdoors for any extended length of time, Lois Dodd found herself driven
into the shade of her barn studio in Cushing. She had been drawing nudes al fresco with a group
of painters for several years and had accumulated a stack of studies.
That summer, Dodd began to develop some of these
studies into small paintings, each featuring a nude female figure, or several,
engaged in outdoor activities: hanging laundry on the line, sawing wood,
turning the soil, or simply sleeping in the sun-dappled grass beneath a tree.
All were painted on panels in dimensions often associated with the oil sketch.
Nude with
Wheelbarrow, 2000, exemplifies that special bravado Dodd brings to the
subject. The figure casually stands behind a wheelbarrow, her left leg cocked;
she rests a moment before moving the sack of mulch, or whatever the barrow
holds, to its destination. Beyond and around her gray-blue body with its
multiple shadows lies a yellow world broken up by clumps of greenery accented
with blue. The viewer can almost feel the heat of the day, which justifies, if
you will, the figure’s state of undress.
The Intrigue of
Belfast-based Linden
Frederick is one of the foremost painters
of
The painter also has a passion for dusk—“the
hour between dog and wolf,” as French poet Jean Follain once described it. His
ability to capture the most subtle gradations of twilight using oil paints is
remarkable. This is a world that few of us ever really see, distracted as we
are by the incessant demands of modern life. It is at once ominous and sublime.
It is romantic without being faux-luminist.
Where Knock
is Open Wide
Over the past several centuries, the
Sarah Knock entered the field in 1989 while an
artist-in-residence on Monhegan—there is nothing like Rockwell
Knock’s seascapes are often about the sea
itself, about ripple effect and reflection, wakes and floes. Like fellow
David Graeme
Baker's Beautiful Dreamer
Born in
Even rarer in these parts are painters who
specialize in interiors. Over the past several years, Baker has turned his
sights inside, capturing a domestic milieu with stunning verisimilitude.
Working with the figures around him—his young children, his wife, a
babysitter—he creates familial tableaux reminiscent of John Singer
Sargent’s.
In her formal green dress, the recumbent woman
in Baker’s painting, R.T.’s Paper
Crown, 2007, is more than a nanny catching a few winks while her two
charges, one of them in diapers, occupy themselves with toys nearby. She is
also a beautiful dreamer.
Michael
Palmer's Landscape Inventions
In his introduction to the traveling exhibition
“Expressions from
A son of the South (
Today, Palmer divides his time among
In a recent interview, Palmer expressed a view
that is likely shared by the other painters featured here. “I feel an artist’s
work must continue to evolve,” he wrote. “One doesn’t always know to what or
where….” He concluded: “I’ve been fortunate enough to survive doing what I
love.” We, in turn, have been fortunate to have Palmer and his peers provide
new ways of regarding the world.



