The Phoenix Network:
 
 
 
About  |  Advertise
Adult  |  Moonsigns  |  Band Guide  |  Blogs  |  In Pictures
 
Best2012Vote-1000x50

Pace yourself

Quality of light and experience develop over decades
By KEN GREENLEAF  |  November 28, 2007
insideart_pace_BoatSky_1130
SARDINE BOAT, TANGERINE SKY: By Stephen Pace, oil on canvas, 1990.

Stephen Pace | through Dec 30 | at Elizabeth Moss Gallery, 251 US Rte 1, Falmouth | 207.784.2620
The show of paintings by Stephen Pace at the Elizabeth Moss Gallery in Falmouth allows us to witness a small section of the arc of a career that has spanned several decades of what were arguably the most interesting times in American art. Now in his late 80s, Pace came of age artistically in New York in the circle of artists that included Franz Kline, Mark Rothko, Adolph Gottlieb, Barnett Newman, and his particular friend Milton Avery.

Pace lived and worked in New York and, starting in the ’50s, the coast of Maine. He has summered in Stonington since the early ’70s. Now, to be near family, he and his wife are moving to the University of Southern Indiana in Evansville, where a new museum will have a gallery devoted to his work. The university is providing him with a studio. There also will be a collection of his work at Fryeburg Academy, but he won’t be coming to Maine to paint any more. It feels like an era in Maine art is slipping away.

This may well be the last show of Stephen Pace paintings in a Maine commercial gallery. It consists of a dozen or so paintings, mostly oil on canvas, the earliest of which is from 1954, and the latest from 2006.

Throughout his career Pace has crossed back and forth between pure, non-objective abstraction and representation; the two modes informed one another. Abstraction taught him that color, stroke and shape can carry expressive weight without reference to an image. The Maine landscape provided him with ideas, color, light, and pictorial organization that gave him poetic range.

A good example is Sardine Boat, Tangerine Sky, an oil on canvas from 1990. It’s a deceptively simple work that shows a typical Maine red work boat from about three-quarters head-on, surrounded by orange sky and sea. The sky is a series of orange strokes of paint punctuated by occasional dark marks. The sea is also orange, with some red to indicate the boat’s reflection.

Maine work boats are the subject of thousands of paintings, most of which have little or nothing to say. In this painting Pace reports on the essential quality of the light over the sea on that particular day, rather than just mimicking that which could be done with a snapshot. By seeing orange where most would say "gray" or "blue" and presenting the color with coherence, he refers to the complexity and depth of what really happens visually in that environment.

In Quarry Reflections, from 1977, Pace crosses and re-crosses the abstraction/representation boundary. It’s an arresting painting, standing out from its neighbors. Blue shapes suggesting trees get smaller as they ascend from gray shapes (stones) across the middle of the picture, while similar blue shapes get smaller as they descend, below, the lower shapes being the "reflections." They are all surrounded by a field of lighter blue strokes, suggesting the sky and its reflection, while choppy green strokes suggest trees or foliage.

1  |  2  |   next >
Related: Say it loud, The great outdoors, To the lighthouse, More more >
  Topics: Museum And Gallery , Painting, Visual Arts, Mark Rothko,  More more >
| More

[ 02/17 ]   Festival Ballet Providence presents UP CLOSE ON HOPE  @ Black Box Theater
[ 02/17 ]   Mary Poppins  @ Providence Performing Arts Center
ARTICLES BY KEN GREENLEAF
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   AUCOCISCO SHOWS EARLY WORKS FROM BERNARD LANGLAIS AND JEAN COHEN  |  January 18, 2012
    A long time ago in a galaxy . . . well, it was just New York and it may seem like ancient history, but it was real life and what happened is part of who we are. We do like our stories about those days, and they quickly accrete the patina, and lack of detail, of legend.
  •   A PEEK AT PORTLAND ART SHOWS IN 2012  |  December 28, 2011
    Degas and the PORTLAND MUSEUM OF ART headline the news for early next year. We're so used to Degas and his point of view it's easy to overlook what a difficult and radical artist he really was.
  •   CHINESE BRONZES FROM THOUSANDS OF YEARS AGO AT BOWDOIN  |  December 07, 2011
    Chinese bronzes are often felt, quite rightly, to fall within the purview of scholars and collectors who delight in detailed changes from one period or region to another.
  •   THE PORTLAND MUSEUM OF ART SHOWS AN EXHIBIT OF SHAKER CRAFTING SKILL  |  November 02, 2011
    There's something fundamentally American about this very enjoyable show of Shaker work at the Portland Museum of Art.
  •   ROSE CONTEMPORARY'S 'ABSTRACTION' SHOW IS MORE THAN ENOUGH  |  October 05, 2011
    Abstraction is the process of moving from the particular to the general, from the thing itself to an idea about the thing that can thus be considered or communicated. All art is, in this sense, an abstraction. The soup-can painting requires no spoon.

 See all articles by: KEN GREENLEAF



  |  Sign In  |  Register
 
thePhoenix.com:
Phoenix Media/Communications Group:
TODAY'S FEATURED ADVERTISERS
Copyright © 2012 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group