CONNECTION, formal and symbolic, is the driving concept in my work. I establish connection abstractly, through color and form.
 
We live in a harsh world, physically and socially. In this world we constantly experience division, isolation, alienation and despair. But we are never far from overwhelming love and gratitude. I try to make people aware of these transcendent possibilities by intuitively formulating abstract compositions in which harmony and energy manifest.
 
I work in a style that draws deliberately on the formal language and optimistic spirit of 20th century modernism. I am not nostalgic for the recent past, but I find the idealism and liberating attitudes of the Modern era inspiring, both for the model they provide the abstract artists of today and for the coherent way they communicate complex concepts by appealing both to the audience’s intellect and to its soul. I thus feel empowered to engage myriad different elements in my forms, lines and color, the visual transference that centers emotion and establishes a creative dimension of connection – connection between me and my images, connection between my images and my audience, connection between all of us on the basis of shared expansion of awareness. I am providing opportunity – or perhaps making invitation – to feel not just human but to feel our common humanity, connecting to oneself and others.
 
The Geometrix Series is anchored in a perpetual visual engagement. Geometric and architectural forms interact dynamically in space; what emerges is a place to inhabit, a realm of energy in the process of renewal. These living forms – and I consider them living, maybe even sentient – connect, overlap, entangle as they focus and evolve, their lines migrating and meandering into affirmations of intertwined understanding. They visually declare a manifesto of vital symmetry – a symmetry higher than the asymmetric compositions you see before you, but dependent on the dialectical relationship between balance and imbalance and ultimately binding our vision to a world of human and spiritual synchronicity.
  • ESSAY

    ESSAY

    ROSE MASTERPOL: THE GEOMETRIX

    By Peter Frank

     

    We regard the artistic idioms of the recent past with a peculiar combination of curiosity, longing, admiration, and condescension. We believe we have moved past them, and can dote on them like aged grandparents while raiding their closets. But such an exploitative approach to, say, surrealism, Art Deco, or hippie psychedelia does nothing but package these historical phenomena as nostalgic gloss. It does not show them the respect historical phenomena merit — nor does it investigate the vitality that can still pulse through them.

    Rose Masterpol rejects this casual adoption or satirization of bygone styles; her interest in what has come to be known as “mid-century” art and design is not simply genuine, it is thorough and it is passionate. She does not want to steal pointers from Abstract Expressionism or Danish Modern, she wants to understand them to the point where she inhabits them. Masterpol is like a linguist reviving recently extinct patois — or, more accurately, like a poet trying to write in a language she knows as much through research as through memory.

    Masterpol demonstrated her devotion to, and understanding of, postwar abstract painting with several series of gestural canvases begun while she was based in Los Angeles and continued after her relocation to Santa Fe. Indeed, she produced these expansive, choreographed tableaux until very recently, deciding only within the past year to put that approach aside and concentrate on her Geometrix. The need to focus on the new series is evident in the clear stylistic shift the Geometrix represent: rather than the painterly, “expressive” manner that has characterized Masterpol’s entire oeuvre to this point, the new series relies (as its name implies) on clearly defined color areas with sharply rendered edges, composed gracefully, and comparatively languidly, so as to achieve maximum poise.

    If we look closer, however, and keep in mind various aspects of Masterpol’s previous paintings, we realize that the Geometrix do not demarcate as much of a turn from those more painterly works as first seems. Masterpol has certainly adopted a new way of painting, but it is a new way of exploring a given formal vocabulary, not a new vocabulary altogether. Throughout her mature work Masterpol has relied on line, and on a particular kind of line, one that floats and scurries, meanders and cascades across the expanse of the canvas until not just the armature but the entire structure of the picture has been defined. With their open, organic contours and eccentric but rhythmic diversions, the shapes predominating in the Geometrix are redolent of mid-century fabric and furniture design, and of sculpture such as that of Noguchi and Calder. We go back to her earlier series, however, and find many of the same shapes vibrating amidst the brushy clamor; hindsight allows us to regard these earlier formal iterations as struggling to come to the surface. In the Geometrix, they finally do.

    Masterpol has also retained her carefully calibrated layering effects in the Geometrix. Now, instead of describing plane upon plane in a piling-on of brushstrokes and pigmental densities, she wafts one “skin” of flattened translucent color upon another, overlapping discrete areas like Venn diagrams and locking in these drifts and skeins with carefully situated opaque linear forms. Again, this formula echoes those at work in the previous series; but now, it results in a classic, elegant moment rather than an agitated event. The Geometrix still convey a sense of time, but in them time is no longer marked by Masterpol’s hand, but by a more transcendent natural time into which she seems to have relaxed.

    The Geometrix mark a pivotal point in Rose Masterpol’s history. They clarify her thinking and her vision, in effect revealing the undercarriage of her aesthetic and reassembling the chassis. But, however reformulated and reinterpreted, the bones and the lines are the same. The same sensibility that undergirded its nervous marking with lucid flow now undergirds its lucid flow with an extra-corporeal sense of time. The references to postwar modernism are as knowing as ever — and in fact serve to alert us to the formal connections between Abstract Expressionism (notably Gorky, De Kooning, et. al.) and contemporaneous architecture and design (from Saarinen to Eames to late Frank Lloyd Wright). Masterpol has evolved, but she has not strayed, and her informed response to recent art history supports rather than drives her artmaking. Her passion, not her knowledge, is the driver. 

    Los Angeles / April 2019

     

  • "You are a hero in my mind. The art world needs you and so do we. Having more than 10 of your pieces in my houses brings me joy that you will never know.

    Being a witness to the twists and turns in the progression of work throughout the years astounds me. Thank you for being you."

    —Stuart

     

  • TIME + SPACE