The Curator’s Office presents Patrick Wilson ~ Slow Food
Written by Andrea Pollan Wednesday, 16 September 2009 22:45
Washington, DC - The Curator’s Office is pleased to open its fall season with a solo exhibition of new paintings by Los Angeles based
artist Patrick Wilson. Entitled Slow Food, the five paintings on exhibit encourage the viewer to recommit to the pleasure of carefully looking at and savoring the elements of an abstract work of art, allowing for deep aesthetic nourishment. A sophisticated colorist, Wilson displays mastery in creating rectilinear layered spaces through line, layers, pigment densities, variegated light, and textures. Drawing on a modernist lineage, the artist manages to push abstraction’s formalist language into realms of surprising intellectual complexity and visual gratification. His dedication to his craft and his pursuit of meaningful beauty are unapologetic. On view September 12 through October 17, 2009.
His insistence on slowness allows for nuances to emerge that may
otherwise go overlooked. The artist claims, “The act of consciously slowing
down and taking the time to really look was not only a necessity in producing
these paintings, but is in fact essential to appreciate them. In a culture
obsessed with speed and abbreviation over all else, we are becoming less and
less willing to spend time considering anything containing more information
than 140 characters. I hope that this new body of work is a counterbalance
to that way of thinking – slow, complex, unpredictable, beautiful.”
Patrick Wilson received his MFA from Claremont Graduate School. Recent exhibitions include “Electric Mud” at the Blaffer Gallery, University of Houston, TX, curated by David Pagel; “iCandy: Current Abstraction in Southern California”, Cypress College Art Gallery, Cypress; “Keeping is Straight: Right Angles and Hard Edges in Contemporary Southern California Art”, Riverside Art Museum, Riverside, CA, curated by Peter Frank; “Claremont Connections: Selections from the Permanent Collection”, Long Beach Museum of Art, Long Beach, and “Gyroscope”, Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington DC. His work is in the collections of the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Smithsonian Institution, Washington D.C, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, and the Long Beach Museum of Art.
For futher information : curator's office / 1515 14th street nw / suite 201 / washington, dc 20005 + 202.387.1008 / www.curatorsoffice.com / This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
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