Max Protetch Gallery is pleased to announce its first exhibition of
paintings by Ann Pibal. Her work has been seen in several important
group exhibitions recently, including Greater New York at P.S. 1 in
2005, and she has won awards and fellowships from the Pollock-Krasner
Foundation, the American Academy of Arts and Letters, and the New York
Foundation for the Arts. Pibal's paintings feature deceptively simple
compositions that utilize geometric motifs such as targets, rectangles,
lines, and open cubes. Pibal works in both small-... Read more
Max Protetch Gallery is pleased to announce its first exhibition of
paintings by Ann Pibal. Her work has been seen in several important
group exhibitions recently, including Greater New York at P.S. 1 in
2005, and she has won awards and fellowships from the Pollock-Krasner
Foundation, the American Academy of Arts and Letters, and the New York
Foundation for the Arts. Pibal’s paintings feature deceptively simple
compositions that utilize geometric motifs such as targets, rectangles,
lines, and open cubes. Pibal works in both small-scale and large-scale
formats, though no two paintings are exactly the same size. The
compositions, executed in acrylic on thin aluminum panels, suggest
shifting situations, motion or entropy; there is an active approach to
spatial relationships, so that small spaces often denote much larger
ones. The geometric figures themselves are sometimes repeated, but with
slight differences, juggling accepted notions of symmetry and balance.
The sense of play that runs through these trends in the work makes each
painting a place where fixed or defined figures and forms become
flexible upon closer viewing.
This extends to Pibal’s use of color and light. In particular, Pibal
has been interested in the light of transition, light that denotes the
passage of time; and in twilight and dawn, the periods when forms
appear to change, blur, and undergo transformations. Though the work is
not specifically narrative, it does pit the possibility of literary,
rational understanding against the irrational or sensual aspects of
physical experience. Color is perhaps the primary sphere in which this
juxtaposition takes place, in which space is marked for its emotional
and psychological characteristics.
Pibal’s paintings demonstrate a wide range of affective states and
intellectual approaches, as well as a keen awareness of the historical
challenges posed by abstract painting, and by American abstract
painting in particular. Each painting, arrived at intuitively,
approaches the condition of language without coalescing into totalizing
statement (a fact suggested by their titles, which are mostly comprised
of invented words that bear resemblances to existing ones). As a group,
the paintings become a pluralistic conversation not only about the
challenges and possibilities inherent to abstraction, but the ways in
which historical context and imagination intersect.