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Bernadette Lawler, owner of Mixed Company, continues
to keep on keeping on as the heart and soul of the coolest
of the cool galleries that also happens to offer up vintage
furniture for the oh-so-boss set and neo-bossa nova set
to boot. Yet, of late, she has been upping the ante on her
roster of artists, concentrating further on the gallery
side of things.
The collaborative paintings of Nuala
Clark and Jimmie James
are the visual equivalent of an ever-cool muted trumpet
solo played real slow and easy. Besides the obvious Miles
connection, these two also one-up Oliver Nelson to prove
the blues is the abstract truth via personal written compositions;
an old school nod to paintings from an Abstract Expressionist
angle that graced many covers of jazz albums from decades
ago.
John
Pompetti cuts loose with work that offers up
primary colors that are stark but never static. The kinetic
momentum pulsing through his paintings proves that less
is not just more, it's the most. Life in the here and now
is idealized, and also actualized; it's made all the more
real and precise. He takes a page from Pop plus tacks on
some weird bit of design systems gleaned from advertising.
However, what's sold is something that possesses an undeniable
sense of mystery. Just when you think you've got a grip
on Pompetti's work, it veers off into unexpected territory.
Mixed Company has something for everyone, and that
saying plenty!
Mixed Company, 60 N. 3rd St., 215.627.8688, www.themixedcompany.com
PRESS/REVIEW page 2 - August 4 2004 - R.B.
Strauss
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