Mar 26th 2010

Richard Hull

@ Western Exhibitions

119 N Peoria St, 2A, Chicago, IL 60607

Opening Friday, March 26th, from 5PM - 8PM

On view through Saturday, May 1st

Richard Hull’s new works explore spatial relationships, both metaphorically and formally, between the geometric dualities of empty and full spaces. The prevalent imagery, a biomorphic shape that resembles a horse’s tail, or when doubled and combined, a Möbius strip, or a Klein bottle*, gives viewers the visual sensation of being simultaneously located both inside and out. Reverberating concentric lines inside the primary shapes allude to movement and connectivity, and can be thought of as pathways, highways or circulatory systems. Inside these pulsating pathways are several series of dots, ellipses, concentric squares, and other diagrammatic marks that the artist thinks of as architectural, almost like apartment complexes.

Eyeball-like images crop up in several works, perhaps alluding to the artist’s partial vision in one eye. Another painting references Sisyphus and his repetitive action of pushing a boulder up a mountain, Hull’s concentric and reverberating rings make an apt visual metaphor for the energy Sisyphus expended.

The architectural details are reminiscent of Hull’s most well-known works that often depict abstracted interiors or house shapes. In this new body of work, Hull inverts his interest in interiority, sublimating it inside these coursing concentric highways embedded within biomorphic forms. Given his interest in the dialogue between empty and full spaces, Hull has now turned his painting practice almost inside out, whereas the shapes in each painting maintain this reciprocal dialogue and the body of work as whole starts a conversation with preceding works. Past works nurtured a dark and introspective mood; current paintings look out as much as they look in. Past works kept to a earth-toned palette and heavily worked surfaces; bright, directly applied high-keyed color now plays the prominent role. In Hull words, “color has become its own entity.”

* The Klein bottle is a non-orientable surface (a two-dimensional manifold) with no identifiable “inner” and “outer” sides.

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