Santa Monica
- Share via
Southern California artist Stephen Kafer uses ordinary building materials, painstaking craft and a geometric vocabulary in sculpture that suggests a standoffish, politely academic interpretation of Constructivist notions.
“Wedgeway,” a steel-framed doorway attached to a chest-high wedge of patinated copper, doesn’t quite succeed. The same lack of presence bedevils “Corrine’s Walk,” a long sheet of glass clamped horizontally into a rusted metal framework that also expands in other directions to enclose a couple of rectangular sheets of steel. A carefully pieced-together copper box comes along for the ride.
Faiya Fredman comes a cropper in another way, by trying to construct a reverie around the shapes of plumbing fittings.
Inspired by viewing a demolished home, she has produced sand-sprinkled paintings of over-life-size gray or softly rust-colored pipes. Some of these “K Series” pieces involve multiple paintings jazzed up with insertions of black-painted corrugated cardboard. But the effect is too jauntily arbitrary, the cardboard serving neither to add a formal rigor nor to enrich the fanciful aura Fredman seems to be after.
But even these “no-frills” paintings--hung at wildly skewed angles as if to give them a spurious liveliness--seem too simple-minded. Muting every surface with sand is like shooting all one’s film with the same filter. Modulated color and large, gently delineated shapes make a beginning, but can’t carry the whole show. (Ruth Bachofner Gallery, 926 Colorado Ave., to July 30.)
More to Read
The biggest entertainment stories
Get our big stories about Hollywood, film, television, music, arts, culture and more right in your inbox as soon as they publish.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.