On the Nature of Abstraction: Sean Scully

Scully

Scully

Sean Scully, Inis Oirr Vl, 2005, black and white photograph, 56.7 x 72.6 cm

Sean Scully, Inis Oirr Vl, 2005, black and white photograph, 56.7 x 72.6 cm

“My paintings talk of relationships. How bodies come together. How they touch. How they separate. How they live together, in harmony and disharmony. The character of bodies changes constantly through my work. According to color. The opacity and transparency of how the surface is made. This gives it its character and its nature. Its edge defines its relationship to its neighbor and how it exists in context. My paintings want to tell stories that are an abstracted equivalent of how the world of human relationships is made and unmade. How it is possible to evolve as a human being, in this." Sean Scully

Scully

Scully

When I first saw Scully's paintings I was struck by their physicality. These are big objects. Frequently the stretchers are quite deep.   Not only does he paint blocks of color that are stacked one on top of the other, but he also physically builds paintings into paintings. One stretched canvas is inserted into a hole in another canvas. A completely separate entity inserted into the picture plane. The paint is visereal, thick, luscious, complex, layered, Like nature itself. But then, the big surprise: These paintings are filled with light. So, when you look at these blocks of color you think about what kind of light and even what kind of weather they exist in. Looking at some of Scully's photos, you do get a sense that this notion of place, light, and atmosphere is not foreign to him. They are not just paintings about how things look in nature, but about how they behave -- body next to body, stone next to stone.

Scully

Scully

Wall of Light Cubed, 2007, Sean Scully, granite, Aix en Provence, France

Wall of Light Cubed, 2007, Sean Scully, granite, Aix en Provence, France

Sean Scully

Sean Scully

Sean Scully

Sean Scully

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