Click on the image to
enlarge. | |
The work of Fritz Rauh uniquely combines the organic forms and
palette of Art Nouveau and the kinetic effects of color as explored
by the "optical" painters. The early work of Richard Anuszkiewicz is
most applicable here. Rauh fills his surface with small amoeba-like
single-color units, closely packed on a sometimes contrasting,
sometimes harmonizing ground in such a way that foreground and
background become interchangeable. Separating the two colors are
narrow spaces, either bare canvas or a third color, which assume
great importance in the overall composition by intensifying the
color relationships, activating the negative and positive forms, and
helping to bind masses of units into larger forms. The vigorously
vacillating surface, heightened frequently by flat color areas
defining the limits of the canvas, evokes, in jewel-like or somber
tones, the beauty of the micro-organic world of the scientist.
From Alfred Frankenstein of the San Francisco Chronicle,
"Whatever their method, the effect of these works is magnificent.
Rauh has mastered acrylic paint to produce an exceptionally rich
spectrum. Some of his works abstract the presence of leaves and
flowers shimmering wonderfully in warm garden light; others go
deeper into the forest, still others invoke the sea.
No literalism at any point, mind you, not even any impressionism:
it all remains in the abstract framework but it admirably imitates
nature as its method of working."
ARTIST BIOGRAPHY
Use your mouse to select any of the numbers, and the image
will appear in the window on the left hand side of the screen.
|