Art

The Sheer Dazzle of Glass

Robin Jebavy’s large, still life paintings are showy, but how much is below the surface?

By - Mar 24th, 2015 04:17 pm
Red Still Life, 2014. Acrylic on canvas. 71 x 42 inches

Red Still Life, 2014. Acrylic on canvas. 71 x 42 inches

The Lynden Gallery exhibition of artist Robin Jebavy includes just eight works, but they are big, often about the size of a door, so it doesn’t feel like a small show. She also has abundant technique, so the exhibit doesn’t lack for showmanship. Her paintings are often still lifes, concentrating on multiple glass objects, in a style that is dense and layered, capturing complicated reflections and points of light in works the Lynden exhibition calls “crystalline labyrinths.” The Dutch masters of the Baroque era have been a particular influence on her, Jebavy says (she describes her work as “neo-baroque”), but her work seems quite different in approach.

Jebavy’s father is an artist and art teacher. She was raised around and immersed in art, visiting museums, seeing her father work. But her style is very different, she says: “He’s a Minimalist and I’m a Maximalist.” Jebavy describes her undergraduate study abroad in Florence, Italy as a crucial experience, both artistically and personally. She switched from making self-portraits to larger, quite different works during graduate school at the University of Iowa. She created installation pieces that sought to immerse the viewer in a “metaphysical” space, and her current work, as the Lynden describes it, is “to offer the viewer an experience that evokes the original, sublime, oceanic feelings of union with the strange and mysterious ‘other,’ of self with universe.”

This goal is quite different than that of the Dutch Masters, who were far more grounded and sensual in their paintings. They developed the still life in response to  the decadence the Catholic Church, often painting a carefully selected grouping of objects symbolic of the passage of time and suggesting the fleeting nature of sensual pleasures. Their meticulous execution became a feat of virtuosity for the painter. (Ironically, they were often called “vanities,” referring to the vanity of the viewer, given his/her ultimate demise, but the paintings were also a vanity piece for the artists — essentially showing off their technical abilities as a painter.)

Jebavy references the Baroque in works with titles like “Bach’s Organ” and  “Sun King.” The latter uses architecture, mirrors (as in Versailles) and repeated forms of glassware. And she certainly has a virtuosic style. But her works are larger scaled, with a monumentality not normally associated with the Dutch Masters. And they not surprisingly have a very contemporary feel. But more importantly, the Dutch Golden Age was all about how the source of light created dramatic perspectives. By contrast, there is a flattening of space in “Sun King” which allows the shapes to float on the surface and become a repeated design, but obscures any sense of perspective.

Some of her works are horizontal compositions which portray objects on a table as an Old Master painting might, but there the resemblance ends. Jebavy photographs assorted glass objects and vessels and then carefully layers them in Photoshop. One section may contain 200 images, compressed to form a complex, crystalline image, which she then meticulously paints. Sometimes the still life starts with a clear glass containing colored water, other times the glass is lit with different gels to achieve various color shifts. “Blue Still Life,” “Red Still Life” and “Green Still Life” are three different such works, all densely woven and layered, such that they become almost surreal.

There was a theatricality to Baroque paintings, with their dramatic lighting and activated space, that brought the viewer into them. By contrast, Jebavy’s work, with all its layering and photo-shopping, symmetry and repetition, obscures any sense of the light source and is always reflecting back at the viewer. The result is surprisingly opaque, a showy surface that nullifies the transparency of the glass objects.

Robin Jebavy: “Recent Paintings” continues until May 31 at the Lynden Sculpture Garden, 2145 W. Brown Deer Rd. 

-And the RedLine Gallery has extended until May 31st its Johanna Poehlmann show, which we reviewed here.

Gallery Robin Jebavy: “Recent Paintings”

0 thoughts on “Art: The Sheer Dazzle of Glass”

  1. Anonymous says:

    So Jevaby reflects (ha) contemporary philosophy: it’s all about external beauty, reflections dazzle, distracting from empty interiors, tricksy technological work hides meaninglessness, more is more.
    It’s beautiful work technically but leaves the viewer feeling kind of cold.

Leave a Reply

You must be an Urban Milwaukee member to leave a comment. Membership, which includes a host of perks, including an ad-free website, tickets to marquee events like Summerfest, the Wisconsin State Fair and the Florentine Opera, a better photo browser and access to members-only, behind-the-scenes tours, starts at $9/month. Learn more.

Join now and cancel anytime.

If you are an existing member, sign-in to leave a comment.

Have questions? Need to report an error? Contact Us