Kenneth
Baker, Art Critic
San
Francisco Chronicle
October 23,
2004
JOACHIM
BANDAU'S BLACK WATERCOLORS PUT SILENCE ON EDGE
The
black watercolors of German sculptor Joachim Bandau at Patricia Sweetow Gallery
can induce in viewers a mental state parallel to the artist's own as he made
them.
They
illustrate nothing yet create the sensation of looking at gosamer sheets of
smoky gray material stacked upon a white page until they blot it out
completely. In an especially fine untitled piece from 2003, the layered
"sheets" vary in dimensions considerably, though their edges stay
roughly parallel. We see through the various layers around the periphery.
Sorting
out the details thoroughly requires the same sort of concentration and
commitment it cost Bandau to make the pieces. Even a viewer unacquainted with
the incorrigibility of watercolor - its refusal to be forced, the difficulty of
keeping dark washes unmuddied - will intuit the technical feat Bandau's pieces
represent.
In
a departure from his first show at Sweetow, Bandau also presents a couple of
very lightly worked watercolors. They construct transparent volumes of planes
so proportioned that we can barely keep their edges in view when looking at the
smooth gray fields themselves.
Bandau,
68, belongs to a generation that took process seriously. The successive
application of watercolor layers echoes the tendency of some artists to make
sculpture by stacking. The sense of deepening silence that Bandau's black
watercolors evoke brings to mind the big stacks of felt rectangles that Joseph
Beuys made, intending to give silence tangible form.
Rather
than reaching for allusions, Bandau's works seem to gather references to them.
In a sequence of four big sheets, framed separately but in tight proximity, he
has slightly pinwheeled the layered planes. The resulting graphic stutter
effect may bring to mind the stroboscopic motion studies of Eadweard Muybridge
or even Marcel Duchamp's "Nude Descending a staircase" (1912), which
an American journalist famouly ridiculed as "an explosion in a shingle
factory."
Bandau's
show divides a little puzzlingly into recent watercolors and drawings, and
small wall sculptures from the '70's.
Stand
close to the gallery entrance and you can see the rough affinity between the
grindingly worked graphite "Bunker-Architektur"18.5.1977" and an
untitled black watercolor composed of aligned vertical rectangles.
The
graphite drawing and the mixed media "Vormarsch" depicts a wave of
construction turning a landscape of rhombohedral figures into barrackslike
buildings, evocative of both concentration camps and postwar urban planning.
Even
this scant background lends the darkness of the black watercolors added
metaphorical depth and makes one wish for a broader view of Bandau's art.