Artwork of the 80's
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Artists & Works

Cleve Gray
American (b. 1918)
PERNE #3
Acrylic on canvas
57" x 65.25"

STYLE: ABSTRACTION

 

After graduating from Princeton in 1940, Cleve Gray went off to fight in WWII and ended his tour of duty in Paris, After his discharge, he returned to Paris, where he studied with Andre L'Hote and became close to another mentor, cubist Jacques Villon. Returning to New York, he soon began to exhibit his cubist-inspired paintings and was successful. Gray's painting style changed as the abstract-expressionist movement gathered strength, and he became more interested in Chinese masters and spontaneous expression. He continues to exhibit regularly through the present time, enjoying a successful, respected status in the art world. His work is in major collections worldwide and has been featured in many one-person exhibitions and both museums and commercial galleries.

By the seventies, Gray's work had left most of its cubist-inspired underpinnings behind and had evolved to incorporate risk and accidental effects as well as thinly-spread layers of pigment. In Perne, for example, a small explosion of painterly incident at the right of the canvas takes place over layers of orange hues. The inspirations for these abstract works range from Greek sculpture to Hawaiian waterfalls. Their relationship to oriental calligraphy is also apparent.

CRITICAL EXCERPTS

Thomas Hess, Cleve Gray, Albright-Knox Art Gallery, 1977
"Gray's recent and, to many who have followed his work with interest over the past decades, his most successful paintings are group-titled Conjugations and Conjunctions (note the blunt citation of dualities and their resolution). They concern large, mild, almost blank fields, with some mild static at the framing edges. Within the field, usually towards the lower section, is a lump or blob of emphatically calligraphic swirl. It's a distinctly abstract shape. Gray carefully eliminates any visual puns or slips into animal or vegetable associations. The fields are keyed to strange, in between hues: a violet that inhabits a space in between greens, for example, or a black that hangs out with scarlet. Below, the calligraphies hunker into themselves as active interlaces.Gray arrived at this latest development through a logical if astonishing evolution. First came a long series of upright shapes, some of them based on glimpses of waterfalls in Hawaiian forests (in 1970), others on meditations about classical Greek sculptures (first seen on an Aegean voyage in 1964), especially a goddess image. The upright shape was perfected, with bends of thigh and swerve of torso, until Gray brought it to stunning monumentality in Threnody, 1973, a suite of murals for a giant space in the museum (by Philip Johnson) of the State University of New York at Purchase.
...The given, the hypothesis, is a field of pure if ruffled color. Gray works on it for days, applying all the cunning and sensitivity to the medium that he's learned in a lifetime of work. After the field is prepared, the calligraphic element is added, sometimes within the framing space that marks the edges, sometimes on top of an island of color established towards the bottom of the sector--a sort of field within the field. Up until this stage, the work has progressed thoughtfully, systematically, with both eyes kept wide open for planned effects and happy accidents, and with the hand and wrist in tight control of the flowing pigments.
Then Gray loads a brush with a predetermined hue. He takes off his shoes and steps into the middle of the picture. He closes his eyes, stoops over, and commences the gestural drawing. And he screams. A wild, crazy howl--like a Zen swordsman or Wu initiate--Ch'iang! Darkness by day! The east wind blows gust on gust, spreading magic rain--chanted by the ancient shamans. Gray pulls the drawing, the paint, eyes still shut, along a path he had prepared only in the most general terms, in his head. He calls the procedure, with a grin, 'my screaming act', and he is a bit embarrassed when he describes it."