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Profile: Roger Vail

Profile: Roger Vail

Roger Vail - Photo: Jeremy Sykes, SactownFrom its inception in the early 19th century, photography has been about alchemy. Not just the chemical kind that occurs in darkrooms (or today in Photoshop) but the alchemy of the imagination in which ordinary things are transformed. Roger Vail, whose retina-burning photos of neon signs go on view this month at JayJay, is a master of this sort of thing. Since 1970, the year he joined the art faculty at CSUS, Vail has trained the lens of his 8 x 10 view camera on seemingly ordinary subjects to produce images that range from poetically minimal to flat-out hallucinatory.

 His best-known pictures, of carnival rides at night— are blazing wheels of color that look like an artist’s palette run through a spin cycle. “I didn’t know what was going to happen; I just shot it,” Vail says about the earliest of those images, a B&W from 1970. “When I saw the film I just flipped.” That “accident” formed the basis of an oeuvre that would encompass night skies, oil refineries, bridges, marble quarries and rivers. Zipper
In 2006, Vail scored a hit when Life splashed one his carnival pictures on its cover, accompanied by a seven-image spread inside. Bill Shapiro, the magazine’s formermanaging editor, called the pictures “quintessential American iconography. They’re a thrill ride in every sense of the word. They capture the way you remember those hot August nights at the state fair.”
 
Vail’s exposures, which range from several minutes to hours, reveal not only the otherworldly aspects of his subjects, but a variety of spooky artifacts – none of which the artist conceives beforehand. “It’s the forms, colors and textures that catch my eye when I’m working,” says Vail. “Content comes later.”
 
Colin Westerbeck, a former photo curator at the Art Institute of Chicago, likens the “irony and playfulness” of the carnival images to the “out of control” qualities of “a Hitchcock film where it’s dangerous and a little wacky.”
 
His assessment certainly holds for the neon-sign pictures, Vail’s his first departure from film, produced with a digital camera so that he could electronicazlly combine multiple exposures and capture the full tonal range of high-contrast night scenes. Made primarily in Las Vegas, with notable snaps in LA and Sacramento, the pictures use reflected light to pimp-out a limo in flowing zebra stripes; recast a hotel wall as a pigment-laced river; turn a stack of café chairs into a spinning kinetic sculpture; transform the “Viva Las Vegas” sign into a cosmic gyroscope; and pay homage to early influences: Dan Flavin, the minimalist fluorescent light sculptor and Edward Hopper, whose iconic “Nighthawks” painting Vail salutes in “Open Late, a sumptuous photo of an empty café.
 
Martini GlassWhat motivated him to revisit those inflkuences – Flavin in particular – was a display of sign sat the Museum of Neon Art in L.A. After photographing there for “four full days,” he concluded that neon was the only thing other than carnival rides “that would give me a full spetrum of color at night. It became an obvious choice.”
 
Born and educated in Chicago, Vail, 62, is an intense, compact man who speaks with the same forthright conviction seen in his compositions. He credits the city itself and the Art Institute of Chicago, where he earned his BFA and MFA degrees, with forming his aesthetic sensibility.
 
In Chicago, Vail spent a lot of time pouring over images by seminal artists like Walker Evans and Robert Frank – two influences championed by the museum’s then-photo curator, Hugh Evans.  Evans became Vail’s mentor and advocate and placed the young photographer’s works in the museum’s collection, paving the way for acquisitions by others, such as the Museum of Modern Art, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art and the J. Paul Getty Museum.
 
In 2010, the Pence Gallery in Davis will give Vail a 10-year retrospective in which he will not only show his time-lpase portraits taken at night of carnival rides and neon signs, but perhaps also a new set of portraits. 
 
Rivera Hotel Facade Tree
 
“I’m trying to do to humans what I did to carnival rides,’ Vail says of the work in progress. To underscore that point, Vail reads a quote from sculptor Mark de Survero: “The heart of art is the search for form that is electrifying, that gives life to our vision.”
 
Vail’s work is like a circus mirror – a shadow world in which reflections and refractions transform solids into liquids and gaseous apparitions. It’s not the dictionary definition of alchemy, but close enough.

 

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Profile: Roland Reiss

Profile: Roland Reiss

  

roland_reiss_jan_2008__use-thisAbstract painting has had plenty of passionate, articulate champions over the years, but few have exercised as much material inventiveness as Roland Reiss.  In the firmament of LA art, Reiss occupies a unique station – that of cutting-edge artist and academic visionary. 
there_and_here_2004_19x_24_acrylic_on_mylar2

There and Here

   For 30 years beginning in 1971, Reiss led the art department at Claremont Graduate University, taking a fledgling program and transforming it into a creative laboratory, equal in strength and prestige to the best institutions on the West Coast.  He also maintained a highly successful studio career with gallery and museum shows throughout the U.S., Canada, Europe and Asia.  Reiss retired in 2001, but only from academia: that year he launched the Painting’s Edge program at Idyllwild Arts, a two-week forum in the San Jacinto Mountains that painters and critics say is the best idea exchange of its kind.

            In the studio Reiss has always been an explorer, and at 77 his ardor hasn’t cooled.  In his current cycle of abstract, acrylic-on-Mylar paintings (on view most recently at Gallery C in Hermosa Beach), he pulls swaths of brightly colored pigment across his surfaces, leaving see-through spaces that afford views of subsurface layers that function like “movie cartoonist animation cells.”  The most vivid of these, seascapes, read like musical notations; while his landscapes, which include representational elements, employ metallic substrates to activate layers of pictorial space, both real and illusionistic.  All, in their isolation and amplification of specific shapes, colors and forms, evoke a set of atmospherics that practically shout “LA!
Begin at End

Begin at End

“Painting is first and foremost always about light,” Reiss observes in his downtown LA studio. “But the idea that you can refract, reflect, contain and transmit light in new ways, including the exposition of it in colored, transparent volumes or iridescent, pearlescent and interference-colored surfaces of different densities is exciting.”  Reiss speaks fluidly and emphatically in a commanding baritone, projecting the force of an intellect that has always linked media and message.  Semiotics and behavioral research, for example, have been long-term interests.  So when Reiss says “the psychological aspect of visual perception” is what drives him “to intensify the power of abstract form as signifier,” you begin to understand that his paintings aren’t just random collections of environmental artifacts, but explorations of consciousness.   Reiss first attracted international attention with the Plexiglas-encased, diorama-like slices of life he called “miniatures”. Fueled by Umberto Ecco’s writings on semiotics, Robbe-Grillet’s novels and the films of Fellini and Bergman, these quasi-anthropological investigations into conformity, family ritual, consumerism, mobility and corporate culture mixed voyeuristic thrills with biting social commentary.  Critics, curators and collectors embraced them.  But by the time the Barnsdall mounted a 17-year survey of that work in 1991, Reiss “had grown tired of social subject matter and wanted something deeper, more spiritual.”  So he quit sculpture for painting that year and vowed to take the medium “beyond where it has been.”

Floater

Floater

In 2005, after experiments in geometric abstraction and P&D, he succeeded. With a series of wall-mounted Plexiglas boxes coated with clear and colored acrylic gels, Reiss was able to cast shadows on walls in ways that made it impossible to detect the shadow source or the source of the plastic activity occurring inside the pictures without touching the surfaces. The effect was mesmerizing and confounding.  And, so very LA in the way that artifice and illusion combined to form a perception-based aesthetic. 

             ”I live in LA and I think my work is about the experience of LA light,” says Reiss.  “It is about my experience of the world, about how I feel, see and think.”

rogue-wave-2007-19x-24-acrylic-on-mylar2

Rogue Wave

natures_way_2007_10x_12_12_acrylic_on_mylar2

Nature's Way

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