One of the Daisy Craddock paintings on display at the Georgia Museum of Art |
A native of Memphis, Daisy Craddock
received her training in Tennessee and here at the University of Georgia, where
she received a master of fine arts degree in painting. She then moved to New
York City and became involved in conservation, later establishing her own practice
specializing in postwar and modern art.
Her work has taken two
distinct, though not unrelated, directions. One is an ongoing series of square
pieces of paper drenched with color. Craddock utilizes pastel and oil stick to
craft finely tuned color studies — a sort of mash-up between Josef Albers and
Mark Rothko. She has recently conceived these works as a series of diptychs,
with one panel representing the outside of fruits of vegetables and the other
their insides, simultaneously abstract and realist. They present the world literally
but so reframed through manipulating scale that the viewer is delocalized—just
what are we looking at?
A similar sense of the
familiar and the unknown pervades Craddock’s landscapes, two of which are on
view in the Georgia Museum of Art’s M. Smith Griffith Grand Hall and one of
which (a recent gift) is upstairs, in the museum’s permanent collection
galleries. Humans are absent, but the works are not lonely. Salmon-colored
passages suggest winding paths, leading us into meditation with nature. The
paintings are nostalgic, invoking all the sensory memories of summer days, but they
are not sentimental. The landscape is also not an arcadia, but rather an
intimate portrait of the artist’s favorite subject: trees.
Her seemingly impulsive
brushwork provides a sense of vitality. Many of her early landscapes were
painted with bits of sponge at a time when so-called “neo-expressionism” was in
vogue in the marketplace and critical circles. The tools create a brushy,
breezy quickness, which belies the artist’s slow and deliberate approach to
creating. The oft-hectic brushwork further disguises her inherently minimalist
compositions. This is the tree reduced to its most essential form.
Comparisons of her work to
impressionism are easy and often made. The artist cites color-field theory and
Bay Area abstraction as more prominent influences in her masses of color and
pared-down forms. The foreground, midground and background merge and separate
variously, creating movement and depth within the composition while invoking
the proverbial debate between the forest and the trees.
Craddock’s works are on view
through October 15, 2018, and the artist will speak at the museum at 3 p.m. on
Friday, August 31. Her lecture is titled, “Paintings from the Early Eighties, in
Context” and will touch upon her early influences as a young MFA candidate as
well as her experiences living and working in New York City. You can
learn more about Craddock and her work on her
website.
--
Joseph Litts
Former Assistant to the
Director
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