CHROMOFFECTION

CHROMOFFECTION

Tomislav Nikolic, Elisabeth Vary, Aidia Tomescu

June - July

FOX/JENSEN

10 Putiki Street
Grey Lynn, Auckland
New Zealand

Chromoffection is a happier, more manageable condition than that described by David Batchelor in his important text Chromophobia. Rather than suffering the allergy Batchelor suggests plagues Western society - the fear of colours corrupting agenda and superficiality, each of these artists don’t just have an affection for colour - they are conducting an open affair with it. Each are certain of colours capacity to deliver form, to offer an intuitive emotional charge to space and even to be a symbolic cultural framework. 

Where Nikolic, Tomescu and Vary differ from, say the more fundamental colourists is that they are equally committed to gesture, tone and structure, elements that work to break the monotheistic stupor in favour of a vigorous ecumenical celebration.

In Chromoffection, Elisabeth Vary serves as a link between the more divergent approaches of Nikolic and Tomescu. Vary’s carefully formed constructions offer her the chance to address multiple facets of her complex objects. Like chromatic icebergs that have breached the walls of the gallery, Vary’s forms resist the planar nature of the stretcher, preferring at least five surfaces to attend to. Though Nikolic’s treatment or implication of the frame into his compositions suggests he too is dissatisfied with having only one surface to paint. Colour leaks around every corner colonising the adjacent space. The frame is not a border signalling the end of the composition but simply a permeable border.

Aida Tomescu’s paintings explore colour just as determinedly as either Nikolic and Vary but the delivery of it differs wildly. American painter Winston Roeth suggests that he doesn’t choose colour, colour chooses him and in talking with Aida I very much get the sense that there is a vigorous wrestle between judgement or reflection and the buoyancy of material and gesture in every cadence of her work. These paintings celebrate paints unreliability, its boisterous character. Tomescu though holds this volatility just in check allowing the viewer to feel paints wilful behaviour and to smell colour in a visceral way.

The gallery is very pleased to present the works of these three terrific painters.

Andrew Jensen, June 2016

News

March

21

FOX/JENSEN & FOX/JENSEN/McCRORY at Art Basel Hong Kong 2024
March

15

In conversation at STATION
March

07

Spatial Play
February

20

FOX/JENSEN & FOX/JENSEN/McCRORY at Melbourne Art Fair 2024
January

24

A Phoenix Journey
December

16

The never ending show - part 1
November

15

Being's believin
September

07

FOX/JENSEN & FOX/JENSEN/McCRORY at Sydney Contemporary 2023
June

21

FOX/JENSEN & FOX/JENSEN/McCRORY at Tokyo Gendai Art Fair
June

09

invocations of consciousness