San Francisco Chronicle
Saturday, October 26, 2002; page E-10
GERMANS AT SWEETOW
The Patricia Sweetow Gallery has been a
pipeline to contemporary German art that might otherwise never be seen in the
Bay Area.
Sweetow's current show introduces Joachim
Bandau and Kuno Gonschior, two near contemporaries of Gerhard Richter, well
known in Europe but new to the West Coast art public.
Bandau's abstractions on paper will stun anyone
familiar with the difficulty of laying down an even wash of watercolor.
His procedure sounds simple. On large sheets of
cold-pressed paper, he has drawn roughly concentric freehand rectangles, each
smaller than the last, and filled each one in succession with a layer of tinted
gray. As the layers of wash build up, their areas of overlap darken stepwise all
the way to black.
Maintaining the watercolor's transparency as
layers accumulate takes extraordinary relaxation and control. The even, velvety
blacks that cap Bandau's sheets attest to a technical mastery perfectly
sustained.
Concept and aesthetics come into a fine balance
here.
Bandau's process reiterates the fundamental
technique of traditional watercolor: articulation of color and figure by
transparent layering. And his planar compositions ripple outward to claim the
page's edges illusionistically as an invented perimeter.
Two steel floor sculptures by Bandau function
very differently, though they too involve interlocking planes.
To understand them, one has to think about
their dependence on gravity and look very carefully at their profiles and how
the minimal elevation in each piece is achieved