BOB
HUOT RECENT PAINTINGS
Bob Huot’s work from the 1990’s reflects the
artist’s abiding fascination with the nature of painting.
Initially these impressive canvases – like Bob –
seem big, exuberant, aggressive, sometimes playful, overwhelming,
and emotional. As one considers the artist and his paintings
more carefully, however, it becomes clear that there is
a strong dose of self-knowledge and intellectualism that
governs these seemingly expressionist outpourings.
Huot
had, of course, been one of several artists in the mid-to-late
1960s in whose hands the art object dematerialized.¹
In retrospect, he reflects with irony that the quest for
dematerialization led him back to the object, but the traditional
western painting format of the rectangle no longer satisfied
him. Noting that shaped paintings have existed in western
art since at least medieval altarpieces, Huot was aware
of the fact that he did not want to choose a new format
that was arbitrary or gratuitously novel. After reading
R. Buckminster Fuller in the 1960s, Bob grew increasingly
interested in the possibilities of the equilateral triangle,
which he used more and more frequently in the mid-to-late
1970s in the Truss and Decoration series. He wanted to break
from the rectangle’s window/mirror implications as
well as (perhaps even more importantly) from its associations
with industrialization – the representative unit of
pre-fabricated materials and compartmentalization. The triangle,
by contrast, enables Bob to project what he describes as
“a whole other geometry” that signals the potential
for a different universe. Huot admires the physical strength
of the equilateral triangle because it creates something
much greater in structural strength than a rectangle. For
this founding member of the Art Workers’ Coalition,
replacing assembly line symbolism for that of cooperative
experience was undeniably potent.

Venus of Willendorf - 1995

Divine - 1995

Triskellion - 1995 |
Within these triangular canvases, tripartite
iconic forms predominate. The shapes have their origins in
sketchbook doodles and gesture studies. Once Bob discovers
a form that intrigues him, he reexamines it in oil stick and
then, possibly, with color variations. The forms with which
he has been working of late are distinguished by their different
series – for example, Venus, Icon, or Post-Atomic. Though
each series has distinctive characteristics, they are nevertheless
very much interrelated by the metamorphosizing tripartite
shape that is central to Bob’s iconography. The haunting
landscape of Homage to A.P. Ryder (1995) or the Venus of Willendorf
(1995) from the Venus series, morph from darker, primal eroticism
into the over-the-top, slurpy Divine (1995) of the Icons.
Divine’s soft pinkness fine its complementary counterpart
in the lean ant the athletic Icon entitles Triskellion (a.k.a.
Michael) (1995) or the atavistic , somewhat menacing and medieval
Heraldic Totem. Infinitely suggestive in its potential meanings,
this tripartite form Bob employs is not limited to biomorphic
interpretations. The Post-Atomic series of bomb-shelter-warning
triangle trios is yet one more permutation within this alternative
geometric universe Bob invokes.
Maintaining
a tension between both sides of a thematic coin (masculine/feminine;
organic/inorganic) is, indeed, a salient feature of Huot’s
recent paintings (within individual works and from canvas
to canvas). His Venus Racemic (1996) readily exemplifies
this counterpoise. Using racemic crystals as his model (crystals
occurring in mirror-image structures), Bob composed a mirror-image
painting that juxtaposes his eroticized, biomorphic venus
form with geometric triangles to create a careful balance
between the sensual and the intellectual.² This juxtaposition
suggests a myriad of essential dualities, such as ignorance
and enlightenment and passivity and action.³ In Bob’s
work, these poled should not be perceived as opposites,
however, but are perhaps better understood as complementary
halves, like the racemic crystal.
Stylistically,
Bob is equally fluid in his ability to balance varied, seemingly
contrary, means of expression. In three of his most recent
paintings, Tallonfall, Ode to Ad, and Rottacon (all 1998)
one can watch him pursue ideas through gestural brushwork,
move to a Reinhardt-inflected geometry, and shift back again,
parallel to the thematic juxtapositions noted above.
It
is quite interesting, in fact, to analyze all of these recent
works, to witness Bob through forty-odd years of experience,
assemble the fundamental building blocks of painting so
that form, color, surface finish, and pictorial space coalesce.
The iconic Talonfall, for example, suggests a bird of prey
in flight. Its three “wings,” however, merge
with the painting’s Mars black border. The slightly
glossy cadmium yellow, in turn, interacts aggressively with
the black while equally defining form, thereby dissolving
and distinction between figure and ground.4
Similarly, in Rattacon, the cadmium yellow light matte,
stainless steel coarse, and carbon black matte paints are
in constant movement across the surface of the canvas so
that the acidic yellow, de Kooningesque Woman form is constantly
checked and matched by the other two tones.
As
with every other aspect of his painting, Huot’s manipulation
of color is a test of limits. To preface a description of
his approach to color, Huot tells a story about the origins
of his interest in “object color.” When he was
a young boy, his father gave him old house paint and brushes
and Bob painted all his toys – trucks, helmets, shield,
airplanes, and so on. He notes that even as a child he was
aware that each object needed to be just the right color,
and he repainted the truck or drum if he felt the first
color was not quite correct. As a mature painter, Bob still
prefers bold, straight hues and seeks to retain the fundamental
character of those he uses.5 He has
little interest in Albersian, relational resonance, nor
does he use attractive color solely for its visual appeal.
Instead, as in Talonfall, he employs contrasting colors
to see how far they can be pushed and still retain their
individual integrity. This is particularly notable in the
radioactive palette of the Post-Atomic canvases but can
be found, more subtly, in works such as Ferguson’s
Ghost (1995).6 Here Bob plays cadmium
red against stainless steel, but maintains chromatic balance
and reins in the projecting red, by proportionally controlling
the overlay of black gestural markings.
Ferguson’s
Ghost provides a useful example as well for examining how
Bob navigates through a composition’s space. Here
he sought to create a painting and a color space within
a plane that has limited dimension. His musings about Ghost
led Bob to these questions: “Can I make a painting
that is primarily two-dimensional and still plays with space?
How can a thing be superimposed but not suggest three dimensions?”
Such reflections evoke the image of a scientist proposing
a hypothesis for experimentation, a valid paradigm for Bob
Huot’s relationship to his work. In addition, this
is wedded to a drive of sheer exuberance for painting.
With
sustained admiration for artistic forebears Bradley Walker
Tomlin (especially the late work), Stuart Davis, Marsden
Hartley, and Franz Kline, Bob Huot understands where his
efforts stand within the continuum of modernist practice.
And
after more than forty years, he knows, too, how to make
a “good” painting, but that’s not what
he typically sets out to do. Instead, Bob strives to push
himself and the work beyond his expectations of merely being
good to a virtual scientific examination of shape, color,
space, and a subsequent, alchemical transformation of these
formal components into something that packs an emotional
and intellectual wallop.
Mary
E. Murray
Curator of 20th –Century Art
Munson-Williams-Proctor
Institute Museum of Art
Utica,
New York
August 1998
© Mary E. Murray
1
See Lucy Lippard, Six Years (New York: Praeger Publishers,
Inc., 1973).
2
Similarly, R O Y (Homage to Hofmann), 1997, is a triptych
of triangular canvases each with a warm, rich, umber ground
and a lushly painted square of red, orange, or yellow. Huot
finds the notion of squares within triangles a little outrageous
in the first place, but typically for him, once he made
the decision he did it in a big way, with lots of bravado
brushwork. For all its painterliness and color, the triptych
cannot of course escape its inherent geometry and there
are several marks of measurements noticeably visible under
each square that determine its size and placement. These
marks are, in fact, places in the physical center of each
triangle; the bottom of each square rests on the vertical
center of the triangle, which creates the effect of an optical
illusion.
3
As such, they are reminiscent of the “absolutes”
to which Jack Flam referred in describing Robert Motherwell’s
work in Robert Motherwell (New York and Buffalo: Abbeville
Press, 1983), 27.
4
In fact, Bob dismisses such a distinction, believing that
the painting is all one entity.
5Although
mixing reduces a color’s intensity and diminishes
its true nature, Huot admits he has been known to tone a
pigment up or down – if it’s the right thing
to do for a painting.
6
One of a dozen or so paintings Huot created that were conceived
as “skins,” canvases intended to be stretched.
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