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Ilona Sochynsky - A Journey into Abstraction

From The Creative Woman Volume XIII, Number 4 - Winter 1993
by Christina Saj
Kaleidoscope, oil
on linen
10" X 10", 1986
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Every artist hopes to create a unique view of the world: Ilona Sochynsky
has succeeded. An artist with an intensely personal vision, her work is
strong and intriguing with haunting, obsessive images. Her paintings
take on their most original, personal character when she juxtaposes
realism and abstraction.
Her quiet unassuming persona, particularly when discussing her own work,
is not reflected in her paintings, which show strength of character and
presence of mind. She reconstructs an inner reality in her pictures and
invites the viewer to step into it. Over the last decade, Sochynsky's
work has progressed from photo realism, through abstraction and elements
of surrealism. The paintings are executed in a very clean, hard edge
manner; the handling of oils is accomplished, with smooth-surfaced,
uniform application. |
| Sochynsky's work belies the prejudice that painting is dead and that
academic training hinders creativity. Her technical virtuosity and
evocative images would be impossible without sound academic discipline
and tradition.
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Petro in
Space, oil on linen
26" X 38", 1983 |
Self Portrai with Hair Brush, oil
on linen
38" X 26", 1982
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| Images collide, intertwine, abut, overshadow, obscure, and enhance each
other. In her early work, Self Portrait with Hairbrush (1982) and Petro
is Space (1983) for example, she places human figures and abstract
objects in juxtaposition with often surprising, always arresting effect.
With their air of vague unreality and myth, the objects depict the
artist's attempt to amalgamate the animate and inanimate worlds. She
contrast s softly molded flesh against hard edged colors and contours in
the background.
In her more recent painting, the narrative aspect is somewhat diffused
by the further fragmentation of images and elimination of figures. More
mysterious origins lend a haunting quality. Her work often feels pieced
together, not constructed on multiple planes. By altering levels of
focus, by varying placement of the images, and by giving inanimate
objects what she calls a symbolic "human attribute" Sochynsky replaces
the human figures in her paintings with objects.
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A painting such as
Purple Glove (1986) is a good example of this. Fragmentary glimpses of
her reality give us perspective on a world which sometimes contains
realistic space, sometimes imaginary space, and which included the two
on jagged and overlapping planes. Forms float and give off an erriness
that redefines their purpose. The real world meets her world, and scale
loses all sense of recognizable proportion. Shapes takes on a meaning of
their own, and the few literal images, like the glove, take on a new
weight and significance.
Purple Glove, oil
on linen
48" X 48" 1986 |
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| Sochynsky alters levels of focus and placement of images in Coversation
(1987), where she has stripped her images to its bare essential. In
capturing a specific moment in time, she makes generalizations and at
the same time is very precise. She focuses on her principal image and
reinforces its dominance by setting it on a dark dramatic background,
while making it's surroundings a blur of oncoming traffic. Yet, detail
like dental molding on the building behind the figures is carefully
considered. The figures are given precisely the amount of gesture needed
to indicate the moment of conversation. |
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The Conversation, oil
on linen
20" X 24" , 1987 |
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Her work is unified by the perpetual reference to figuration - one of
the underlying thrusts in her paintings. Her journey is marked by the
exploration of subject from a close vantage point which leads to further
abstraction. This absorption with distance from her subject emerges as a
study of particular moments in conjunction with jumbled images, much
like one would imagine in a situation of simultaneous thoughts and
events. The mind is given opportunity to sort these images and make new
connections and interpretations.
Metropolitan Night, oil
on linen
12" X 14", 1990 |
| In her most recent paintings, the remaining figurative images -- without
which the artist says she could not paint -- have taken on a more
stylized, flatter presence. In Metropolitan Night (1990) and Landscape
with a White Cloud (1990), she creates less volumetric forms with a
different treatment of light in the painting, so that the painting is
less dramatic, more playful and elegant. Shapes emerge from one another
without the forced cropping that was evident in earlier works -- as
though her shapes are finding their place.
Landscape with White
Cloud, oil on linen
16" X 18", 1990 |
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No longer is there a sense of looking at pieces of things. The color is
more felt to the particular occasion, not so brash. A cubist reference
appears in her use of denser, flatter yet modeled geometric depiction.
Her compositions are crammed with information, characters, sometimes in
slightly jarring relationships. Sometimes, there is a feeling of a
colorful explosion. In Kaleidoscope (1991), there is a joy that is
unleashed in this packed multi-textured painting.
The progression of her most recent series of paintings presents a
repetition of simple recurring shapes -- she is developing her own
undeciphered mythology. |
Kaleidocope, oil
on linen
10" X 10" 1991
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For more information about
Ilona Sochynsky's work please visit www.ilonasochynsky.com
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