Ross Bleckner United States, b. 1949
96 x 84 1/2 in
Working in earnest during the beginning of the AIDS crisis, Bleckner often used his canvases to reference broader ideas of mortality and loss while still adhering to a rigid set of visual conventions. His paintings deal "literally and metaphorically with the idea of death" (M. Herbert, "Ross Bleckner", Tema Celeste, 2001, p. 83.). Each strip acts as a channel in our own vision that beckons a deeper journey into the fog of memory hidden beyond the surface. The painting becomes a talisman for reminiscing about events catalogued away in our minds.
Provenance
Private Collection, NYArtist studio