Linda Besemer: StrokeRollFoldSheetSlabGlitch

February 12鈥揓une 25, 2022  |  Main Gallery

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Bugaboo (2021)   Acrylic on canvas over panel   15 x 18 inch
Linda Besemer, Bugaboo, 2021. Acrylic on canvas over panel, 15 x 18 inches.漏Linda Besemer. Photograph by Brica Wilcox. Courtesy of the artist and Vielmetter Los Angeles.

StrokeRollFoldSheetSlabGlitch is the first survey of works by Los Angeles-based artist Linda Besemer. This exhibition emphasizes Besemer's ongoing commitment to exploring alterity through conscious "othering" of abstraction and reflects upon the artist鈥檚 search for new meaning in painting over the past thirty-five years. Featuring twenty-three works produced between 1993鈥2021, the exhibition showcases key moments in Besemer鈥檚 career, taking visitors on a journey through the evolution of their practice, starting with early traditional gestural abstraction, exploring their 鈥渄etachables鈥 works, and culminating with their most recent glitch series. Visitors are also invited to delve into Besemer鈥檚 process and explore a collection of the artist鈥檚 maquettes, annotated drawings, and gouache color studies.

Besemer鈥檚 meticulously built works defy expectations. Their bright palette catches the eye with surprising stripes of color and vivid optical illusions. The artist refers to works created from the late 1990s into the 2000s as 鈥渄etachables鈥濃攄etached from their original surfaces鈥攖hese layered compositions become distinctly painterly and sculptural. First, hand painted on plate glass and then peeled away, they capture the gestures themselves. Besemer also calls these works 鈥渁crylic paint bodies,鈥 as isolated brushstrokes, layed paint sheets, and poured slabs transform into their own 鈥渂odies鈥 and embrace of nonbinary, queer realities. This singular process responds to feminist critical theory that links abstract painting with cis masculinity. As they are lifted off their ground, these brilliant stokes are liberated from gendered relationships, disengaged from underlying discourse about systemic patriarchal inequities equated with the figure/ground binary.

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diagonal carved paint artwork called Lil' Hurricane by Linda
Linda Besemer, Lil鈥 Hurricane, 2009. Cast acrylic paint, 10.6 x 7.09 x 2.6 inches. 漏Linda Besemer. CNC routed by Gregory Kucera. Courtesy of Jean-Luc Richard and Takako Richard. Photograph by Jean-Luc Richard.

The glitch paintings imagine a space that is endless and moves in a million different directions. These paintings and their spaces are unfamiliar. They are not grounded in the gravity of a Renaissance fixed perspective, but rather open up the two-dimensional plane with a new expansive spatial awareness.
 鈥揕inda Besemer

In Besemer鈥檚 recent body of work鈥攖he glitch series鈥攖he artist creates a new space of meaning beyond the horizontal, vertical, diagonal movement of their earlier work using the 3D animation program Maya. Besemer collected digital images capturing errant effects generated during shape renderings as the basis for this series. From these, the artist cuts, pastes, and collages new compositions for their hand-colored paintings. The glitch works are meant, in the artist鈥檚 words "to abstract the abstract鈥 to make painting itself new again by transforming digital modes into analog strokes. They appear to be digitally produced at first glance, but brushwork within the works reveal their true handmade quality. Besemer鈥檚 pictorial space is rife with the tension of dissolution and re-materialization inherent in this new process. Curves, lines, blips, buzzes, and swaths of saturated color within the mind-bending glitch abstractions invite viewers to lose themselves in an electrifying visual matrix.

Linda Besemer: StrokeRollFoldSheetSlabGlitch is accompanied by a 92-page full color catalogue designed by Amy McFarland of Clean{Slate}Design, with essays from Director Paul Baker Prindle, curator Kristina Newhouse, and leading LGBTQ+ scholar Lex Morgan Lancaster, author of the upcoming Duke University Press publication, Dragging Away: Queer Abstraction in Contemporary Art.