ART IN REVIEW - The New York Times


Brian Clarke

'The Glass Wall (Dedicated to Linda McCartney)'

Tony Shafrazi Gallery

119 Wooster Street

SoHo

Through Sept. 12

Taking as his leitmotif the heraldic fleur-de-lis, the English artist Brian Clarke has produced a mammoth eight-panel wall, measuring 1,012 square feet, that curves across the space of the gallery. A tour de force of contemporary stained glass, its brilliantly nuanced colors range from near-transparent white to rose and sparkling blue. Though its subject matter is entirely secular, it conveys a feeling of great cathedral spaces. It also owes something to Matisse's late large-scale cutouts for the chapel of the Dominican convent at Vence, France.

Starting out as a painter, Mr. Clarke has in recent years become noted for his large-scale stained glass collaborations with architects, in countries ranging from Switzerland to Brazil to the United States. This wall, however, was made as a tribute to Mr. Clarke's friend Linda McCartney. It consists of eight panels, each gridded with 35 squares of leaded glass, differing in their colors and emphases.

In the first panel, a panoply of shimmering greens, the eye teases out the freely drawn fleur-de-lis; in another panel, it glows prominently in a hearty pink-rose touched by white against a background of celestial blue. In the last panel, milky whites define the motif on a rose ground. In panels between, traceries of the fleur-de-lis can be read, but overall the panels are seen as shimmering curtains of pure translucent white or color.

Mr. Clarke's extraordinary sense of color and architectural design, expressed in a scale that is entirely appropriate, make ''The Glass Wall'' a strikingly beautiful work. GRACE GLUECK

Was this article displayed correctly? Not happy with what you see?


Share this article with your
friends and colleagues.

Facebook



Share this article with your
friends and colleagues.

Facebook