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Sipario (Italian for theatrical curtain or scrim) is a reflection on a contemporary sublime: one that is profound in its absolute superficiality, theatricality and vast scale. The Sipario paintings are inspired by the aesthetic and emotional experience of daily life in Los Angeles, a city of visual contrasts and contradictions: stunning natural beauty coexisting in a cultural climate of facile content, saturated digital aesthetics and air-brushed, synthetic effects. The works address the existential through a romanticized and hyper-analog translation of digital media and contemporary imaging tropes particular to mass media and visual culture.
In these works, constructed landscape and atmospheric imagery present a mirroring of process and content—their exaggerated artifice reveals and disguises the processes by which they have been made, and a relationship between picture and craft is evident. Ranging in color from bright, glowing artificial to a natural and grayscale palette, the picture planes are vast and vacuous, evoking the emotional emptiness of unflinchingly optimistic, success-oriented Hollywood values and self-improvement ideology. Iconographic elements—appearing as recurring texts, rainbows, moon and stars—point to themes of faith, hope and desire. Visual "faith", or suspension of disbelief, is required of the viewer throughout and is a thematic thread connecting the diverse paintings.
Works such as Albertine and Odette are generated through paint pours onto unprimed canvas; the poured image is then overlaid with a ready-made fade—a two-tone semi-transparent fabric. This innovative technique mimics the digital "pour" and "gradient" editing features common to Photoshop, yet achieves a dramatically low-resolution and analog effect, calling to mind an enlarged or "actual-size" printout of skies and clouds. Other monochrome works such as Dusk Clouds and B/W Gradient are the result of an entirely different technical approach: a hand-generated gradient achieved through repeated layering of thin acrylic washes. The resulting effect is one of seamless perfection evoking the digital fade backgrounds prevalent in mainstream media advertising (internet, cell phone and billboard graphics) or the subtle and vast gradient of a Los Angeles
sunset.
The paintings make a direct reference to California Light and Space, sharing concerns of subtle light plays, monochromatic surfaces and atmospheric effects. This influence is paradoxically cross-bred with a more conceptually-driven Modernist approach: ruptured pictorial illusionism by way of heightened technical processes (pours, stains, sprays), resulting in a critically self-referential picture plane.
Mara De Luca, 2011