Nau mai, haere mai, welcome to EyeContact. You are invited to respond to reviews and contribute to discussion by registering to participate.

JH

Hot Vertiginous Pleasures

AA
View Discussion

They might overwhelm, but with their very considered placement and knowing pattern alignment, they are not out of control.

Auckland

Amber Wilson

The Bends


3 March - 1 April, 2010

A couple of months ago I visited a group show out at Unitec’s Snowwhite gallery and commented on the watercolours of Amber Wilson. The year is passing quickly and her new oil paintings - now showing at Anna Miles - are understandably quite different, though still very much preoccupied with pattern and rhythm.

Whereas the watercolours were restrained, Wilson’s eight oil paintings are, in contrast, as you might expect, ‘full on’. They revel in loud garish organic patterns, yet when you study them, there is a lot of nuance. First impressions can be deceptive, and the colour is not as saturated as you might suppose - though it certainly is heated. In fact it is not shrill, but highly insistent and at times muted. More importantly, Wilson’s use of shape is extremely inventive.

These richly patterned canvases look like they are a hybrid of Ed Paschke and Elizabeth Murray, or made by Howard Hodgkin on acid. Their backgrounds seem to also allude to Victorian book marbling, fabric design, underwater sponges and lush beds of rampant tropical flowers. The inner shapes floating in front, containing plain or swirling colours in silhouette, hint of items as varied as animal parts, Moorish architecture or rubber stamps. There seems to be no embracing logic, but appear to have evolved through intuition.

If anything they are linked by humour that plays across the figure - ground relationship. There pervades a nutty ambiguity so that shape is always generating multiple interpretations. It is always loaded and rarely ‘pure’ abstraction. The vertiginous psychedelic wackiness is tempered by meticulous control of tone and a subtly serrated edge, especially when rendered by tiny multiple brushstrokes.

Wilson’s inventively decorative paintings are rich heady concoctions that celebrate ocular pleasure. They might overwhelm, but with their very considered placement and knowing pattern alignment, they are not out of control.

 

Print | Facebook | Twitter | Email

 

Recent Posts by John Hurrell

JH
Installation shot of Jim Roche at Starkwhite.

Eviscerated ‘Tunnelling’ Surfboards?

STARKWHITE

Jim Roche


Jim Roche


4 October - 8 November 2025

JH
Louise Bourgeois, The Couple, 2003, aluminum, on loan from a private collection. Photo: Christopher Burke, © The Easton Foundation. VAGA at ARS/Copyright Agency, 2025 |

Brilliant Visceral Bourgeois

AUCKLAND ART GALLERY TOI O TAMAKI

Louise Bourgeois


In Private View


Curated by Natasha Conland


27 September 2025 - 17 May 2026

JH
Nick Austin, Fear of Loneliness, 2025, mixed media, 2160 x 1800 x 200 mm overall, Detail.

The Potential Dangers of Seductive Art History, Perhaps?

COASTAL SIGNS

Nick Austin

 

Breath Spectrum

 

25 September 2025 - 25 October 2025

JH
Installation of Simon Denny's 'The Future' exhibition at Michael Lett.

Boom Boom: Hell on Earth

MICHAEL LETT

Simon Denny

 


The Future

 


3 September - 11 October 2025