James Howell
Von Bartha presents an exhibition of works by influential abstract American painter James Howell (1935 – 2014), Decoded. Noted for his rigorously experimental approach to colour theory, the artist meticulously studied the parameters of the colour grey, fascinated by its unlimited tonal possibilities. The exhibition features works primarily from Series Ten, a group of monochrome paintings which Howell began in 1996 and would continue to work on until his passing in 2014. Smaller sequences of works were included within the series, such as Progressions, which shows the development of the colour grey across six small square canvases. Howell regarded Series Ten as an ever-evolving body of work in its own right. The exhibition includes eleven paintings and nineteen works on paper, including graphite, pastel, acrylic, etchings and monotypes. Another highlight is the four-section acrylic painting 68.98 10/26/94, on display for the first time in over twenty years. The sublime and minimal are both apparent within the gradation of light and shadow in Howell’s paintings. The artist held a lifelong fascination with mathematics and physics as evidenced by his systematic approach to his work, as well as an interest in Eastern Philosophy. "Grey,” Howell explained, "embodies passages of time, for me. It is mysterious...and I like its softness; also its simplicity, and space." Moreover he considered his paintings to be fields of energy, as well as an investigation between the physical and metaphysical properties of grey. Howell always used the square as a format, which he divided into 29, 28 or 30 uniformly sized horizontal lines. Each line is stroked vertically, progressing from being lighter at the top of the work to growing gradually darker towards the bottom of the support. The movement of light is so subtly executed that at times the effect is almost impossible to distinguish. Thus, whereas some works are calibrated to expose an almost invisible narrow degree of gradation, in others, the parameters are set further apart.