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About 'Who’s Afraid of Red, Yellow and Blue ?'

Review

About 'Who’s Afraid of Red, Yellow and Blue ?'

by María Cristina Torres Valle Pons

At Proyectos Monclova

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Reading time

4 min

Seven artists convened in search of some trace of the spirit of painting after years of hundreds of forensic affirmations about the closure of their practice, the cyclical hypothesis of their neo-neo-neo-effectiveness, and the immemorial outbreak of conversations from the chromatic dimension.

The eighth presence in the show is spectral. In the late 1960s, the American painter Barnett Newman created a series of four paintings titled Who’s Afraid of Red, Yellow and Blue. On two occasions the phrase’s explicit question was palpably answered: in 1982 a student attacked Who’s Afraid of Red, Yellow and Blue IV, and something similar happened in 1986 when someone (“a confused man” according to the Stedelijk Museum*) cut Who’s Afraid of Red, Yellow and Blue III with a razor. Perhaps something in each of these acts of iconoclasm confirms the power of what destroys.

Javier Areán

Smoke on arrival. A pyroplastic cloud pulses through the crater of a volcano and through the white-blue oil in front of which one remains safe from the smell and temperature of the eruption. All around appear the impressions of other spectacles, those that stand on a sad, macabre, or cruel backstage.

Who’s Afraid of Red, Yellow and Blue, View of installation in Proyectos Monclova, Mexico City, 2019, Courtesy of the artists and Proyectos Monclova, Photo: Ramiro Chaves
Who’s Afraid of Red, Yellow and Blue, View of installation in Proyectos Monclova, Mexico City, 2019, Courtesy of the artists and Proyectos Monclova, Photo: Ramiro Chaves

Elsa-Louise Manceaux

Three paintings about any one of those instants in which thousands of planes are flying over and plaguing the earth. A journey among an application’s digital data, giving access to the flow of information about air transfers and the inaccessible layover of a chromatic atmosphere, emerging in order to indicate positions floating over fictional geographies. Painting that speculates about the appearance of the infosphere and the framework by which the sky is (in)visibly traced.

Elsa-Louise Manceaux, Live Air Traffic #3,​ 2019, Gouache acrílico sobre lino preparado, 238 x 195 x 4 cm
Elsa-Louise Manceaux, Live Air Traffic #3,​ 2019, Gouache acrílico sobre lino preparado, 238 x 195 x 4 cm

Michael Conrads

The creasing of the space, thanks to the illusion of linear perspective, unfolds from the canvases towards the white of the gallery. In a vertigo of color are raised walls together with fences, doors, and corridors of geometries painted from an isometric and vibrant horizon. The paintings’ architectonic imagination overflows towards the construction sustaining them, moving between fiction and the expression of abstract structures.

Who’s Afraid of Red, Yellow and Blue, Néstor Jiménez, view of installation in Proyectos Monclova, Mexico City, 2019. Courtesy of the artist and Proyectos Monclova. Photo: Ramiro Chaves
Who’s Afraid of Red, Yellow and Blue, Néstor Jiménez, view of installation in Proyectos Monclova, Mexico City, 2019. Courtesy of the artist and Proyectos Monclova. Photo: Ramiro Chaves

James Benjamin Franklin

Within the half-melted format of the stretcher bars has been created a continuous overlay of paint on sand, on plaster cloth, on wire cloth, on cloths and resin. The encounter of four variations of the stroke, the shape and the color field appealing to the eyes as much as to a certain memory of the skin.

James Benjamin Franklin, Sundown, 2019, Acrylic paint, sand, cloth, and exposy resin on reinforced canvas, 146.1 x 120.7 x 4.4cm
James Benjamin Franklin, Sundown, 2019, Acrylic paint, sand, cloth, and exposy resin on reinforced canvas, 146.1 x 120.7 x 4.4cm

Sebastian Black

At the opposite end of the gallery, sharp lines draw the transition of undulating shapes between color blocks and precise figures. Works that engage in dialogue with the legacy of modern abstraction and possible recompositions of the chromatic experience. Their prolonged titles superimpose a further layer of words, in which everyday experiences such as a cup of green tea, whale-watching, and a hurricane are yet another piece in this dialogue with the interaction between color and formal tradition.

Sebastian Black, Green Tea! Green Tea! Green Tea! Why Green Tea? How about something more fitting, azalia for instance or pomegranate. Or what about the damsel’s blush? That’s good. Or maybe your grandfather’s knuckles, the ragged calanques pressing out into nowhere, for who knows what reason. What ruddy ore are they made of? Could a painting be made of that? Green tea! Green tea! Green tea! Fine., 2019 , Oil on linen, 152.4 x 114.3 x 3.2 cm
Sebastian Black, Green Tea! Green Tea! Green Tea! Why Green Tea? How about something more fitting, azalia for instance or pomegranate. Or what about the damsel’s blush? That’s good. Or maybe your grandfather’s knuckles, the ragged calanques pressing out into nowhere, for who knows what reason. What ruddy ore are they made of? Could a painting be made of that? Green tea! Green tea! Green tea! Fine., 2019 , Oil on linen, 152.4 x 114.3 x 3.2 cm

SANGREE

Historical reworking makes raw material out of the icon, a respite from the ways that time has been configured. Taking and modifying the legacy of prehispanic vestiges displaces the operation by which the monumental past, as well as the present of analytical worship, are created, for the first time allowing them instead to print an echo of themselves in new volumes of mass, with voices of replication, memory, and appearance.

SANGREE, Wind, 2019, Cement plaster, 99.5 x 75 x 1.5 cm
SANGREE, Wind, 2019, Cement plaster, 99.5 x 75 x 1.5 cm

Néstor Jiménez

A separate room for talk coming from outside. Painting on wood recovered from a place where knowledge intersects with stories about the unfair distribution of resources; the buildings of the Nueva Aztlán Housing Unit—founded by the Francisco Villa Popular Front in Mexico City’s east—are represented through the prism of deserted architecture, designed from the perspective of leaks, overflow, wear, and fracture. Smoke in the last room.

Who’s Afraid of Red, Yellow and Blue, Néstor Jiménez, view of installation in Proyectos Monclova, Mexico City, 2019. Courtesy of the artist and Proyectos Monclova. Photo: Ramiro Chaves
Who’s Afraid of Red, Yellow and Blue, Néstor Jiménez, view of installation in Proyectos Monclova, Mexico City, 2019. Courtesy of the artist and Proyectos Monclova. Photo: Ramiro Chaves

So far, all the works in this exhibition are intact. Perhaps we no longer have anything to fear of red, yellow, and blue.

*https://www.stedelijk.nl/en/exhibitions/63824, consulted on September 11, 2019.

Published on October 4 2019