Thursday, March 6, 2014

Carle Shi's intersactions


by Luchia meihua Lee
Thought, 2005, gallery view, photo by Editorial gallery


Unlike most New York Chinese diaspora artists, Shi has followed her own artistic path. The crossroads of her life journey have been addressed in her paintings.  In place of exotic cultural elements or social criticism, her paintings feature more intimate existence disclosure.  She created still life paintings before 2000, and figurative paintings from 2000 to 2007. Afterward, she continued with rich color, emerging into a seemingly pop mode that deconstructed time space paintings, reinterpreted fauvism and particularly cubism employing feminine imagery in organic motion.

Anthony Haden Guest, 2005, Oil on Canvas
With her background in academic art in China, Shi developed strong skills in realistic painting; and embraced the deep realism of western portraiture. Gradually a conceptual semiotics crept into her still life and mirror structure painting.  In one such mirror image, the contrasting figures express ambiguity. Some of these clear images face the practical world without emotion beyond helplessness or anxiety.  On the other side of the mirror, images are blurred; the figures seem unfinished or look in different directions, giving a hint of spirit. These typically are large signature paintings, for example Anthony Haden Guest.

Shi sometimes adapts elements from western master pieces.  A small painting entitled Prayer involves two green squashes sporting sexy female bodies, reminiscent of a farmer’s couple in Jean-Francois Millet’s “The Angelus, 1857–59.” The thin string and hanging champagne glass refer to the fragility of human relationships. The water bubbles splashing on the squashes are found often in her pop series. The objects depicted seem straight forward and clear, even optimistic; however closer inspection reveals unclear images, despair, and intersection.

Prayer, 16x14 inches, oil on panel, 2014
Her pop paintings, such as self-portrait #1, deconstruct Roy Lichtenstein’s photo pixels by use of a cubic style and a hyperrealism. Thick pouting lips express sexiness and desire on an urban lady. The bubbles and water droplets are not mere repetition; they are a talismanic reminder of the artist’s skill, and a trademark.

In very recent works, Golden Skull and Dimond Head, Shi has connected portraiture to philosophical issues. Shi continues to mature as an artist, merging her latest work pop with acute realism and dry wit to produce a new contemporary genre.
Diamond Head, 25x25, oil on panel,  2014
Pop series, gallery view, photo by Editorial Gallery


Summer Kiss
Butterfly