Linda Bastian

American

About the artist:

Linda Bastian's paintings of flora and fauna express an unexpected forcefulness and mystery. They illustrate a recent trend in representational and pattern painting, as well as a strong commitment to historical references. Her imagery is familiar yet it suggests a deeper meaning. The centrality of her compositions is reminiscent of medeival and Rennaisance tapestry design, where only two levels of space are established. Foreground shapes, seeming to prosses inner energy, force themselves to the very surface of the picture plane. The field explodes with a multitude of small flowers and fauna in a bold variety of brilliant hues. Ribbons of lighter values weave their way around the surface and function to hold the forms within their assigned boundaries. During a recent trip to Europe Ms. Bastian found herself spending more and more time and attention on exhibits of decorative arts, such as intricate lace patterns, illuminated manuscripts, textiles and open work porcelain. In their time these art forms reached a larger audience through their assimilation into daily life, and they became generally recognizable subject matter. Many of these traditional designs have been employed by Ms. Bastian as direct sources of patterns for her prints, paintings and drawings. Ms. Bastian's art reaffirms what is essential for humanness. The flowers, birds and foliage she paints display an opulent sensuality and complexity that is found in nature. Instilled with elegance and grace, blossoming buds and robust blooms burst on the painted surface studded with ornate symbols of regeneration. Ms. Bastian's work is an attempt at expressing a metaphor for life. Her work has the added quality of sensuality which keeps it from being purely decorative. Many of the pieces are nocturnal tableaus, shapes that eminate and glow in the recesses of the imagination. Time and movement have stopped and we can glimpse the mystery that pervades our senses. In the present day history of art the grids of the minimal type paintings are being transformed into nets of lacy drawn out patterns; naked surfaces are being filled in; lifeless redundancy is being replaced by lively fields that engage the eye as well as the mind. Ms. Bastian's work has a sensuous content that goes beyond self-references and the immediate art context. As a structure and a process, patterning allows for a greater complexity of visual experience, rather than most non-realist imagery. It is helpful to see a new artistic style exist with a historical context because it both continues the past and breaks with it. Pattern can be a disguise or a camouflage. Those enriching configurations on carpets, wallpaper and textiles can equalize or confuse our comprehension of shape. The seen world is transformed by them into a state of flux. Ms. Bastian has discovered the dissolving and resolving properties of pattern. With it she has created an original fusion of space and pattern. Ornamental art has been organically linked with culture ever sinced the dawn of civilization, when the first flower illustrations appeared on walls of caves. Fascinated by their colors and shapes, primitive man drew crude pictures of flowers growing around him. Early civilizations incorporated floral motifs into their cultures as both symbols and decorative elements. Perhaps the most avid of all the societies that used flowers and patterns thematically throughout the centuries has been the Chinese and Japanese. Their celebration of nature was carried over into the most detailed and sensitive rendering of flowers. For some time now we have felt the need for an art that will acknowledge third world art and those forms and mediums previously referred to as "women's work" ie. batik tapestry, and hand crafted work. Ms. Bastian, along with other women involved in patterning, offers an art that enlivens a sterile environment and offers direct meaning without sacrificing visual sophistication. It is an art that expresses something other than withdrawal, scientism, or the solipsim of recent movements. Patterning represents a new, refreshing and vital art form that incorporates old world craftsmanship with contemporary aesthetic values. INDIVIDUAL EXHIBITIONS 1980 American State of the Arts Gallery Exchange 1979 Cassandra Gallery, White Plains, New York Soho 20, New York 1977 New York University, New York 1976 Gallery 8, Pasadena, California COLLECTIVE EXHIBITIONS 1979 "Works on Paper," University of North Carolina, Weatherspoon Museum, North Carolina Asage Art '79 1978 International Post Card Show 1977 Soho 20 Invitational Organization of Independent Artists 1975 "Works on Paper," Brooklyn Museum, Brooklyn, N.Y. Westbeth Gallery 1974 Whitney Museum of American Art, New York 1973 Gallery 91, Brooklyn, N.Y. 1972-76 Annual faculty art show, Newark State College and Tyler School of Art 1965 Boston Arts Festival PERMANENT COLLECTIONS Temple University Law School Purchase, Philadelphia, Pa. Readers Digest

Linda Bastian

American

(8 works)

About the artist:

Linda Bastian's paintings of flora and fauna express an unexpected forcefulness and mystery. They illustrate a recent trend in representational and pattern painting, as well as a strong commitment to historical references. Her imagery is familiar

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