“I
think of my work as landscape oriented or having to do with landscape
painting,” says Katherine Tzu-Lan Mann of her complex, visually arresting
paintings. The work is abstract, but Mann’s use of botanical imagery, glimpses
of what looks like sky, orientation and the general ebb and flow of mass across
the picture plane both reference and evoke the natural world. Being in nature
and capturing it are vital to Mann’s practice and she often paints en plein air
near her home in Basye, Virginia.
“I’m not
as interested in thinking about landscape in terms of perspectival space. I
like thinking of it in terms of teeming masses of life and the systems that
make them work together. In the Shenandoah Valley for example, I’m not just
looking at the mountains in the distance, I am actually looking at what is
immediately below my feet. Weeds and bugs and how those are combining and
knapping together.”
Mann,
35, who is half Taiwanese, spent her early childhood and the summers of her
teenage years in Taiwan. During those latter visits, she studied traditional
Chinese shan shui (“mountain water”) sumi ink painting. Although Mann is very
much a product of both Eastern and Western traditions—she majored in Studio Art
at Brown University and pursued an MFA from the Maryland College Institute Hoffberger
School of Painting, where she is currently an adjunct professor—this rigorous
early training and approach formed the foundation of her practice and is
evident in the work today.
According
to Mann the shan shui tradition is not quite as doctrinaire as it might appear
to Western eyes. “You have to perfect a lot of skills and hone your fine
muscles before you get to individual expression, which actually isn’t that
different from traditional western painting education. Yes, as a teenager,
studying traditional painting, meant copying the teacher’s work so at that
point there wasn’t much room for individuality. But while the tradition of
Chinese landscape is very much steeped in the past and learning from masters, there’s
still a lot of personality and emotion that might come into that.”
Mann
starts every work with what she refers to as a “pour”. After laying her paper—sometimes
a sheet, sometimes it is collaged or woven—on the floor of her studio, she
haphazardly pours buckets of watered-down acrylic or ink onto the paper. She
likes the lack of control of the pour, not planning or knowing what she’ll end
up with is both freeing and challenging. It takes several days, or sometimes
even weeks for the water to evaporate leaving a bloom of pigment staining the
paper. “The stain feels ephemeral, natural and in a way kind of elegant and it
would be very easy to stop there, which is what Morris Louis did. But then I
would just be doing what he did, so I like to combine it with other things that
feel like they don’t fit with that type of visual language.” The stain, a
product of what Mann refers to as a “chance operation” becomes the starting
point for the work. It’s an interesting turn of phrase almost oxymoronic,
containing both accident and determination. It could also refer to Mann’s
approach as well as to the melding of Western and Eastern painting traditions.
Mann’s
works are large. Her intention is to create an immersive experience for the
viewer where they don’t just see something, they also experience it, or at
least get a whiff of its essence. This is very much in keeping with traditional
Chinese painting where it’s not about producing a replica of nature, but rather
the idea of nature. Mann also produces large site-specific installations which
allow her to ramp up this sense of immersion. Most of her installations are
paper that’s been cut and woven and then nailed directly into the wall.
Sometimes these are interspersed with wall paintings, some of which spill onto
the floor, veering into 3-D as they colonize space beyond the picture plane. With
“Palimpsest” from 2012, Mann produced an entirely three-dimensional piece
composed of hanging paper.
Mann
pairs great swaths of paint or ink next to areas busy with finely drawn detail,
the veils of the initial pour are tempered by impasto passages. Sumi ink washes
and delicate etchings meet and hold their own against bold bursts of lush color.
Collaged or woven paper offer interesting textural contrast to the smoothness of
the plainer areas. In looking at Mann’s work, one is struck by how it is
charged with energy. It radiates outward in explosive splinters or undulates
across the surface in sensuous mounds, or swirls around like bits of confetti.
With
“Fable” (2014) Mann combines painting, silkscreen, collage and etching to
create a ravishing work of extraordinary complexity and visual power. An
abstract tour de force of composition, juxtaposed texture and color, spatial
dynamism and rhythm, the painting exudes confidence and nerve. From a formal
standpoint, it’s visually dazzling. It’s also curious looking and we can’t help
wondering if what is there is an actual thing, and so our interest is piqued
twice. It’s as if Mann is provoking us to think in two different directions at
the same time.
“Double
Bed” (2017) takes inspiration for its compositional elements from murals
in the ancient Roman Villa of Livia. A lyrical work, it thrums with energy,
albeit a quieter kind. The diptych composition is suggestive of traditional
space with a repeated shape that conveys arched portals, or perhaps these are
the beds of the title. Earth and sky can be read into the left side, but Mann
pulls us back into abstraction on the right, with overlapping vertical bands of
color and pattern. The pine tree at the center evokes nature as do the
greenish, blue and yellow hues. These are punctuated by patches of paint and
gaudy little multicolored daubs that add visual interest and help preserve the
abstract integrity of the work. The swirling ribbons and funny little squiggles
add a lightness to the piece—the visual equivalents of a soft, spring breeze.
Mann’s
work is a virtuosic balancing act between formal elements, technique, images
and movement. There is a lot going on, but Mann never loses control. She flirts
with chaos, allowing it into the work like a dash of piquant seasoning to add
spice to the more placid areas, but it never takes over. “I like combining
something that is inherently and easily, naturally beautiful, like a pour of
paint with something that feels a little more ham-handed or clumsy.” This bravura
visual yin and yang enlivens and enriches Mann’s work and keeps the viewer on
their toes.
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