Friday, December 30, 2011

TULLMAN ART COLLECTION - 'B" Artists






































ALISON BLICKLE































PHYLLIS BRAMSONARTIST'S WEBSITE


ARTIST'S STATEMENT
     I use images that are infused with lighthearted arbitrariness and amusing anecdotes about love and affection, in an often cold and hostile world.  Mostly, I am making work that percolates forth life’s imperfections: that doesn’t take decorum all that seriously, refusing to separate manners of taste from larger questions about ‘good behavior’.  The paintings are reactions to all sorts of sensuous events, from the casual encounter to highly formalized exchanges of lovemaking (and everything in between).  Miniaturized schemes, which meander between love, desire, pleasure and tragedy; all channeled through seasonal changes. Burlesque-like and usually theatrical incidents, that allow for both empathy and ‘addled’ folly, while projecting capricious irritability with comic bumps along the way. 
     The art writer Miranda McClintoc wrote: “Phyllis Bramson’s imaginative portrayals of stereotypical sexual relationships incorporate the passionate complexity of eastern mythology, the sexual innuendos of soap operas and sometimes the happy endings of cartoons.” 
     My "sources" remain those of Rococo and Chinoiserie of the 18th century as well as Chinese Pleasure Garden paintings and the French painters, Boucher and Fragonard.  The paintings of Fragonard usually dealt with pastoral pleasures, (often hiding a secret) and immoral luxury that had elements of the political; caricatures showing the decadent frivolity of his time, when the peasant class was starving.  An art historian described Fraganard's figures as always blushing and sensuous and the landscapes in which the figures dallied, as having the same attributes.  My sensuously composed figures and landscapes blush as well!