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The time is Nau

An artist gets his due in four shows
By CHRISTOPHER MILLIS  |  July 24, 2006


NARKEETA: If paintings are a puzzle, these are the assembled solutions.
I once asked a gallery director how he decides whether to consider representing an artist, and he confessed to having what he called “the rule of three”: if three different parties independently recommended he check somebody out, that’s when he scheduled a studio visit. One Boston artist has gone that rule one better, simultaneously occupying the Project Space of the Bromfield Gallery and being the subject of a solo show of paintings at the Artists Foundation Gallery as well as the featured artist in the Bernard Toale Gallery’s ongoing Boston Drawing Project and a contributor to the summer group show at Tufts University with two of his signature wall manipulations. Chris Nau (rhymes with “cow”) is riding a surge. His popularity is deserved.

This recent work gives a sense of his studied playfulness. He brings an anthropologist’s sensibility — exploratory field work to be sure, but deliberate to the point of mathematical — to his colorful abstract forms. At the center of his paintings and woodblock prints looms a multi-sided, typically striped shape, and within those simple constants of outer edge and inner content begins one of many tensions at work in his frames. The stripes themselves are angular and bold; the shapes they zigzag across have had all their edges pressed into soft contours. Imagine a package with adhesive wrapping that’s been worked over by a rock tumbler or the tide or UPS. Metaphors quickly break down in trying to describe Nau’s imagery, however, since there’s no making sense of how the sharp definition of the patterns coexists with the randomly amorphous forms to which they belong — except that those same words can also be applied to the detritus of train wrecks and car accidents and the aftermath of natural disasters. Integrity and dissolution balance each other. And yet nothing explicitly suggests damage: no edges blacken, nothing appears cut off or incomplete or compromised. After considerable pondering of these images, the nearest I could get to a simile was thinking that this is what space debris must be like: improbable manufactured heaps whose purpose has passed and whose former velocity and direction have been reduced to gravity-free floating.

Floating is indeed another recurrent Nau motif, particularly in the paintings where the background washes of color are not the blue-black of outer space you might expect but instead the subtle tones, sometimes uniform, sometimes graduated, that complement the bright hues of the central figures. Nothing especially new or groundbreaking there, except for the nature of the colors themselves, which enjoy a weird, industrial quality — the sort of hues you might expect on the bathroom walls of a house built in 1958. Again, the effect is disarming. What’s to be made of brick-red stripes interspersed with swaths of police-barricade yellow?

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Related: Breakthroughs, Acquiring minds, The needle and the damage done, More more >
  Topics: Museum And Gallery , Tufts University, Painting, Visual Arts
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ARTICLES BY CHRISTOPHER MILLIS
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