Rosemary Dunbar: The Lighthouse at Alexandria (2003)
Rosemary Dunbar: The Colossus of Rhodes (2003)
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Flattened and distributed over a disjointed picture
plane, the recent work of Rosemary Dunbar plays out a
rather upbeat and complicated view of things both
ancient and modern.
Her recent show at the Blue Mountain Gallery (February
24 thru March 20) entitled "Seven Wonders of the
Ancient World" takes a number of familiar icons of
ancient culture and reinvents them into postmodern art.
For instance Colossus at Rhodes is a riff on male
heroic anatomy that Dunbar presents into a singular
piece composed of inter-connected panels inside of
which arms, legs, and torso are referenced and
presented with simple, yet compelling structure. As in
most of her other works in this presentation, bands or
ribbons of color are injected further flatten the over
all feeling of this work and give it a unifying and
somewhat zany overall appearance.
There is no deneying the Dunbar's sense of pictorial
invention as she tears into the Lighthouse at
Alexandria. What comes forth is a spatially
complicated yet solid image. The building itself is
presented in a series of flat panels that seem to move
in and out in an architectural manner. They are built
on an incredible foundation of earth and water. In the
end the entire picture becomes monumental
"The Great Pyramid at Giza" (oil on paper 41" x 29") is
a series of overlapping triangles that distributes
itself over the picture forming a complicated singular
shape that suggests and alludes to three-dimensional
form without describing or delineating it. In this
image the pyramid advances, retreats, pops up and down
and appears to be in several different places at once.
The work is oil painted on paper. There are a number
of manipulations she goes through, incising lines,
laying shape over shape and stenciling letters into
unexpected places. The outcome of all this are
paintings that are bright, intriguing and totally
original
When asked about the method and technique of her work
Ms Dunbar responded: "Most of the works in the show
were 40" x 29 1/2" and were oil on paper. Two of the
works were 24" x 24" on mahogany panel. All of the
works are a combination of collage, stencilling,
pencil, charcoal and pastel pencil. They are layered
works and I just keep on working on them until they are
done which means they go through many, many
transformations on their road to completion. They were
all completed in 2003."
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