XXXXXIrene
Neal works in the tradition of large size, free form abstraction,
originating with Jackson Pollock, the Abstract Expressionists,
and the Color Field Painters. The art work is the record of
a spontaneous performance. She reinterprets this tradition
by means of new, state-of-the-art, acrylic paints, which have
undergone an extraordinary development in recent years. Neal
aspires to the brilliant accident, the miraculously frozen
moment in the flow of paint. She pours and otherwise applies
paint to a canvas which has been spread out on the floor. She
has said that, “The most important things are the paint
and the color, what color does when it shapes itself”.
She crops out the final picture last, according to the paint
and color movement rather than accepting a predetermined, geometric
form like a rectangle.
.........Working experimentally with the new materials, Neal
has had to improvise her own ways of organizing herself to paint; mixing
and applying colors so as to keep them clear and vibrant, etc. When
first applied, acrylic gels, unlike oils, are a milky white, so it
is difficult to envision the final colors and their relationships.
As the curator, Sue Scott, has pointed out, it takes lots of experimentation,
and a vivid, visual imagination and memory to paint sophisticated paintings,
like Neal’s; with acyclic gel. Her control and virtuosity are
astonishing. Her paintings are spontaneous, fresh, and completely unexpected.
Never mind that after the paint is dry, she often inpaints with a brush,
or collages on dried pieces of acrylic paint to get other colors and
textures, all the better to achieve this free, yet “just right” quality.
XXXXX Neal might be called a “process painter”,
like Pollock in his “drip” phase, and Louis, who
gives the self over to the medium and chance, letting matter
reveal spirit. But unlike them, she is not at all a “series
painter” nor does her work tend toward the impersonal and
sublime. Rather each of her pictures have great individual character,
humor, and playfulness, with each picture telling its own particular
story. She creates her own synergy between free form and figuration.
As a whole, the picture often suggests human figures, animals,
birds, planes, cards, jewelry or reads like a narrative scene.
Completely unintended, these readings confirm the work as a miracle,
a perfect accident redolent with meaning.
...........Character
is the opposite of style. Van Gogh has character, Cézanne
has style (indeed, next to Van Gogh, Cézanne can almost
be called a stylist). Character is the highest expression of
all lyrical art, the aim of which is not beauty per se but “truth” in
the sense of direct, authentic feeling. And the more authentic,
the more free.
............Neal does wonderful miniature paintings which she
makes into jewelry: art to wear. Also, she has done many splendid
works on paper, using a traditional rectangular format. Recently
she has made some remarkable and very original paintings using
clear plexiglass as a support. This makes for a materially unified,
all plastic art object; and their painted areas seem to be suspended
in thin air. Whether on canvas, paper or plexiglass, Neal shows
herself to be a master painter.
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