Visual art exhibitions and events with a platform for critical writing
Tricycle Gallery, London
12 September 7 October
Reviewed by: Roy Exley
Despite the title of Liz Baileys exhibition, with its reference to Jack Kerouacs book and Beat bible of the same name, the roads here play second fiddle to the expansive luminous skies that dominate the picture planes of these wide-open landscape panoramas. Having said that, most of the scenes in these eighteen paintings in Baileys exhibition are either of roads or from roads that seem to anonymously thread their way through a succession of non-places, (a concept made popular by the French theorist, Marc Auge) either desert, plateau, estuarine or semi-industrial. All of these non-places share the banality of the in-between, the marginal, the liminal, and are redeemed only by the glories of those expansive skies.
The majority of Baileys oil paintings here are in the titular series On the Road, each of which is in a diminutive thirty-by-fifteen centimetres, stretched landscape format. These pristine, exquisitely painted images have a filmic quality about them, reminiscent of Wim Wenders cinematographic aesthetic. The empty scenes depicted in these intimate little works are places of transit, places that travellers traverse as part of that subliminal blur that skirts the corridor between departure and destination. There is nothing here that you would want to stop for. It is only Baileys subtle brushwork and colour tones in these photo-real paintings that seduce the viewers eye and coax a longer look. The crisp sensitivity to detail in these paintings seems to contradict the banality of the subject matter, giving them a piquant paradoxical edge.
Only a handful of British painters such as Mark Fairnington, Andrew Grassie, George Shaw and Tom Hackney keep that photo-real flag flying, inherited from the American Super-Realists of the 1970s, among whose number, Richard Estes, Ralph Goings, Malcolm Morley and John Salt shone brightly. Liz Baileys exquisite On the Road series can stand proudly within that tradition.
Writer detail:
Roy Exley
Venue detail:
Tricycle Gallery
269 Kilburn High Road, London NW6 7JR
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