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The mystic is in full view here indeed here, at once deeply
moving and life-affirming. Mixed Company (www.themixedcompany.com),
60 North Third Street, continues to offer pure gems of artists,
with Julia and Maki Yamamoto being two of
the brightest.
Paris born and Marseilles based, the whole of France finds
its way into Julia's
layered yet coy silkscreens filled with the charm of compositions
that inhabit a territory where line and color are dependent
on the basic level of the lives lived by the various and
distinct woman she depicts. Some are clearcut, others fragmentary,
as if they have become colors and lines that are to be reassembled,
though with no pressing hurry to do so. The women she paints
are ideal forms that occupy another plane of existence,
and often these images hold forth in close proximity to
one another, yet are ever separate, as if worlds passing
by through some void just outside our perception, but close
enough for us to sense all too soon now.
Tokyo born and Manhattan based, Maki
Yamamoto offers up fabric work that is unlike
anything to be found in the area, which is always a big
on such art. Possessed of both a gossamer organic quality
and a tight tensile resilience, this work is all billowing
wisps of cloth that holds dear and sheer, almost a scrim
of the soul, a caul of Maki's making.
She imbues her offerings with an informal concern for just
what is needed. Indeed, there is spare quality to her work
that lends it a rarefied ambience, which is both painterly
and sculptural. Her palette is subtle, too, sometimes veering
to various shades of only a single slice of the spectrum,
each one growing fast. This pair brings true international
flair to Old City.
PRESS/REVIEW
- December 3 2003 - R.B. Strauss
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