STROKETRACEBLOW: Mark Making at Steven Zevitas Gallery
Written by Andrew Katz Katz

Jacob El Hanani has touched each of his paper squares thousands of times. His lines in ink become woven, holes popping in and out of the picture plane, and his marked and unmarked surfaces apparent between the lines. Opposed to the illusionistic planes of Hanani, Joshua Neustein builds with paper, even leaving blank or cutting into the surface to expose literal layers beneath. A further comparison reveals allusions to the body. Neustein’s holes in carbon paper become mouths or sex organs and Hanani’s forms like fibers from muscle tissue or veins falling apart and coming together.
Roland Flexner’s drawings talk about the body as well, yet they negate it at the same time. Flexner eliminates his hand all together and uses a different part of himself to create the drawings. Using his breath, Flexner blows liquid graphite around the paper, creating ominous and atmospheric spaces. The more overtly organic forms in the show, his works are like soft, fleshy landscapes and appear to be something not man-made. The evident stroke, trace, and blow administered by the artists who made these works offers us another way to think about the figure, in their residual presence.
--- Anthony Palocci Jr. is an artist who lives and works in Boston, MA. He received his MFA from Pratt Institute in 2012. He has contributed writing to artcritical.com and New American Paintings.
Written by
Andrew Katz Katz
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