NinaJohnson

Rochelle Feinstein: Fredonia!

November 20th, 2020 - January 9th, 2021
  • Rochelle Feinstien, Freedonia! Installation View
    Fredonia!, installation view

Nina Johnson is proud to present Fredonia!, an exhibition of new and recent paintings by Rochelle Feinstein, opening on November 20th and remaining on view through January 9th. Feinstein is a legendary painter, whose work and ideas about abstraction have influenced generations of artists. Over the past four decades, she has deflated the dogmas of modernism with humor and verve, liberally borrowing from different schools of painting, as well as other mediums, including drawing, photography, printmaking, sculpture, video, and installation. Though it takes myriad forms, her singular project always centers painting within culture at large.

  • Rochelle Feinstein, oil painting
    Grid, Apocalypso IV, 2020, Oil on canvas, 60 x 60 x 1 in.

Fredonia! refers to a fictional utopia, a 19th-century name for the United States that never took off, and a failed country in the 1933 Marx Brothers film Duck Soup. The exhibition features several recent bodies of work which reflect upon this time of turmoil, anxiety, and gallows humor. Feinstein uses the motif of the rainbow—a visual trope and cultural artifact first explored while in residence at the American Academy in Rome—to present works rich in color and connotation.

 

 

  • Rochelle Feinstien, Freedonia! Installation View
    Fredonia!, installation view

She moves freely through the history of late 20th-century painting, rejoicing in materiality while poking holes in the notion of pure painting. In one, thick pools of paint are stitched together with a zigzagging horizontal length of acrylic yarn. It first appears as a harshly linear intrusion fracturing the painting. But it also resembles a line graph, and thus represents Feinstein’s playful, subversive use of abstraction to record different types of information.

  • Rochelle Feinstein, oil painting
    Apocalypso I, 2020, Acrylic on canvas, 58 x 60 x 1 in.
  • Rochelle Feinstien, Freedonia! Installation View
    Fredonia!, installation view

The rainbow itself begins to change form, shifting away from a purely optical presence—and from aspirational connotations of pots of gold—to the spectrum’s current use in data visualization

  • Rochelle Feinstein, oil painting
    Fredonia!, 2020 Acrylic, cotton drop cloth, rainbow thread, archival adhesive on canvas, 60 x 58 x 1 in.

In an election year, no colors are more freighted than red and blue. Feinstein isolates these two colors in her Plein Air series. As clouds condense and overlap, one cannot help but think of the Electoral College map on election night. Painted on unprimed drop cloth—wrinkled, with packaging folds still visible—they foreground their material existence, and in doing so, emphasize the logistics of capitalism coursing through contemporary art. A series of smaller works on cardboard further this exploration. These works, with their gradients and graphs signifying everything from customer satisfaction, to humidity, to nothing, are painted on cardboard shipped via Amazon. These are her Happiness paintings: a state which, given the impermanence of the cardboard, is as fleeting as a rainbow.

 

  • Rochelle Feinstien, Freedonia! Installation View
    Fredonia!, installation view
  • Rochelle Feinstien, Freedonia! Installation View
    Fredonia!, installation view
Rochelle Feinstein

Born in 1947, Rochelle Feinstein is a longstanding and deeply respected member of the New York art community. A major survey exhibition of Feinstein’s work originated at the Centre d’Art Contemporain, Geneva (2016), and subsequently traveled to Städtische Galerie im Lenbachhaus, Munich (2016), Kestnergesellschaft, Hannover (2017), and the Bronx Museum of the Arts (2018-2019). Other solo exhibitions have taken place at Kunsthaus Baselland (2018) and the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, Harvard University (2012).

Feinstein is Professor Emerita of Painting and Printmaking at Yale University (2017). Among her numerous accolades, she is a recent recipient of the prestigious Rome Prize Jules Guerin Fellowship in Visual Arts, American Academy in Rome (2017-2018). Her work is in museum collections including the Museum of Modern Art, New York; Amorepacific Museum of Art,  Seoul; Städtische Galerie im Lenbachhaus, Munich; the Pérez Art Museum, Miami; and the Mount Holyoke College Art Museum.