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Artists & Works
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April Gornik
American (b. 1954)
RIVER BEFORE TWILIGHT
(1987)
charcoal and pastel on paper
41.5" x 53.5"
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STYLE: landscape
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©April Gornik |
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April Gornik's paintings assert the power of landscape in ways
similar to the American painters of the 19th century. But instead
of documenting surrounding wonders, Gornik's landscapes owe as much
to her own interior perspective as they do to any exterior vista.
It may seem irrelevant to paint serenely lit uninhabited spaces
in this age of urbanization and technological advancementsuch
spaces are becoming ever rarer and less relevant to the dominant
culture except as nostalgic fantasies. However, Gornik's attitude
towards painting these half imaginary, half representative scenes
is that of the wistful interpreter. She combines the heritage of
Romantic landscape painting with her own idealized mysterious vision.
Significantly, unlike the 19th century works, Gornik does not include
the human figure.
River before Twilight features the hovering clouds, pools
of water, and geometric arrangements of space that characterize
much of Gornik's work. It is an experience of landscape rather than
a particular slice of observed nature. Gornik has said that her
painting is influenced by the books she reads, the music she listens
to (especially opera), and her own experiments with gardening.
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CRITICAL EXCERPTS
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John Yau, ARTFORUM, 1/90
"April Gornick has stuck to the initial attitudes toward both content
and style she developed when she first began exhibiting regularly
in the early 80s...For the past decade, Gornick has depicted open
vistas seen from a distance and veiled in diaphanous light...the
balanced compositions evoke an overall serenityan emotional samenessthat
now seems more a habitual attitude than a discovered "actuality"
of these imagined places...For all her supposed celebration of the
visionary, Gornick handles paint in a manner that is too parsimonious
to produce anything more than frail, nostalgic restatements of well-worn
motifs...an innocent nostalgia for the theatrical views of the Hudson
River School."
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Nancy Grimes, ARTnews,
1/88
"April Gornick's landscapes are often linked to the Hudson River School,
but size is the only similarity. The 19th century landscapists believed
that nature was imbued with spiritual power and that, by faithfully
recording it in minute detail, the artist could commune with God.
But Gornick's feathery expanses of sky and inert fragments of land
are decidedly unnaturalistic, and more infused with mood than spirit...Gornick
fills her large pictures with strips of grass, trees, and lakes that
lie passively beneath shoals of skittering clouds. These empty, static
vistas are often punctuated by dramatic flashes of reflected light
and strange, ominously darkening cloud formations...Gornick offsets
the implacable blandness of the land with an engaging tensenessnothing
is happening with her vacant pastorales, but something might...While
the mysterious and marvelous are often to be found in natural landscape,
Gornick's pregnant pauses seem more concocted than observed...Her
spatial and lighting devices are conventional to the point of cliché,
her shapes flat and flimsy, her paint application limp and monotonous.
The paintings deliberate artificiality and ambiguous sense of scale
(how much space would a human figure occupy in a Gornick landscape?),
as well as their carefully cultivated mysteriousness, suggest that
the artist's territory is symbolist rather than realist. The paintings
have curiously little to do with their intended subject matter. Moodily
psychological, the paintings manipulate the traditional association
of the land with the female body, and thus become something that approaches
self-portraiture." |
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Michael Kimmelman, NYTimes, 4/28/89
"..in April Gornick's ''One'' (1986), a seascape where light breaks
through dark, low-lying clouds, a visitor can sense most clearly
admiration for Romantic painters like Caspar David Friedrich - a
reverence that Susan Lubowsky, the exhibition's organizer, rightly
pinpoints as a distinguishing trait among contemporary American
landscapists."
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