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| Rosemarie Castoro, AmpitHair Coming from the Corner of the Room, (DETAIL) 1972, courtesy of the artist |
By Richard Goldstein
Hanging against the granite walls of the 150 E 52nd Street building’s lobby were several grand dashes of gesso. They blended graciously and unassumingly with the grain of the stone, but stood out with the impact and haste of a gesture most striking. However bold and decisive the mark, Rosemarie Castoro always leaves space for the experience, the interpretation, to see. In this particular space, of ambiguity and insinuation lies the seduction of art—just enough for the viewer to connect and reciprocate with meaning and memory.
Upon entering the
lobby between two potted palms is a dramatic stroke—a river,
jetty, none but
An
Armpit
Hair Coming From the Corner of a Room.
The quirky humor of Castoro’s work is ever-present and a
welcome twist subverting the works’ own authority and
interrupting its own meditative qualities with a laugh. The
humor and absurdity keeps the work from 1972 fresh and at
pace with contemporary work. In the latest issue of
Art Review
John Bock,
likens making a movie to “when you put a nose hair on a
cuticle,” Castoro’s work here recalls this quip, and is
sharp as ever. The formal and linguistic cleverness is
succinct as well in
Party of Nine,
a grouping comprised of nine figures of nines. Party or
not, the artist always goes deeper than mere wit, in her
Statements on Being,
she likens “Groups of people [to] the smoldering fires of
unconsciousness.” There is always a reference or shadow of
the body Castoro leaves behind. Obviously, such traces of
the body are reminiscent of Louise Bourgiose, Eva Hesse, and
Cathy De Monchaux.
Rosemarie is a native New Yorker living and working here for
fifty years. She has extensive exhibitions in
the US
and Europe and
has work in numerous public and private collections. She is
a sculptor, painter,
writer, and
educator.
This installation has coincided with a striking exhibition
of Castoro’s works downtown at Hal Bromm Gallery in
Tribeca. Complimentary to each other, the lobby
installation at 150 East 52 Street brought viewers the
unique opportunity to view two of Castoro’s large-scale
pieces in situ.