-11- Hy FtllNTT StajfH'riU-r The only thing that Joseph Glasco and Bed Long have in common is their inclusion in “Fresh Paint: The Houson School. Long’s two paint ings are figurative and narrative, unlike Glas- co’s panels, which are abstract. In “The Fam ily,’' four people are sitting on a couch, the background and the couch are dark and solid, but the people are translucent, al most ghostly in ap pearance. “Faceless America^ depicts a mother, father and baby standing behind a table covered with food and surrounding them is a cornfield. The colors are bright and the brush strokes are delicate, making the subject seem frag ile. Glasco’s screen is impressive, if only due to its size and intri cacy: there are ten panels, each 88 X 48' and covered with small, rectangular pieces of cloth, each individually painted. Laura Russell, also featured in the show, called it the most fabulous piece. “It’s phenomenal," she said. “It could be any place at any time in the whole world. It’s hard to articulate it; it’s like it’s just so right on. “It works so incredibly on ev ery level. You have this duality going on in it, different kinds of dualities that don’t domi nate each other. They work. It has to do with both sides, it has to do with inside/outside, with paint verses form." Glasco has been doing col lages for about eight years. He said he likes the way he can add a piece of cloth and cover something that was once there, or subtract a piece and make something hidden visible. “It lends itself well to mv work — collage," he said. “Changes are often accidental, which I found I could use in the composition of the thing. With the (paint) brush, it's pre- tty intentional anything you do, because the mind and the hand, it’s all one." Glasco’s work is neither di dactic, nor political. It simply is. “I just do,” he says. “Art is the reason. I'm pretty much of the school — art's about art. It becomes a thing in itself that takes on life. If it’s good, it works. If you’re turned on, one or two other people are going Bert Long s work is currentlv on exhibit in the Butler Galleiy. Nine Months In Hell was painted in 1980. to be turned on. “It’s the one thing that I’ve found that 'makes life worth living. It’s very healthy for ev eryone." Glasco in no way intends to manipulate the viewer’s atti tude toward his own work. “No messages, no. causes, no narratives, no stories as a rule, tional reaction than I’m going to get. You’ll see something to tally different. I’m not plan ning what you’re going to get ’cause I don’t know when I start these what I’m going to get." Glasco doesn’t “try" to do anything with his paintings. People don’t try to make love, pened and I’ll walk away from it and it’s finished, as far as I’m concerned. But it may take 10 years for that to happen, or it make take an hour, or it may take a minute. “It’s a kind of magic that happens which vou can’t ex plain. And vet, if you’re moved by my screen, it’s something “Visual art is about visual art,” Glasco said. “Its an experiential thing; its not about issues. Anything you want to read into them, you’re going to get a different emotional reaction than I’m going to get. You’ll see something totally different. I’m not planning what you're going to get ‘cause I don’t know when I start these what I’m going to get. “Anything you want to read into them, you’re going to get a different emotional reaction than I’m going to get. ” except I use the figure some times, never with the idea of indicating a message. I think that belongs in writing, in liter ature, in another medium. “Visual art is about visual art. It’s an experiencial thing; it’s not about issues.” What, then, do Glasco’s screens say about him? “Anything you want to read into them," he said, “you’re going to get a different emo he savs, either you do or you don’t. “You have in you some where, in a dark spot, what the world would call beauty and you get to that some way," he said.' “Sometimes I work on a piece for a year or two or three or four until it comes alive. Suddenly, I’ll see something in it that will turn it on and I’ll suddenly feel it happen. I’ll know that something hap that I didn't intend to do. My intentions weren't to do some thing to move vou, I intended to move mvself. Mv intentions were to do something that I en joy and get excited looking at. After that, I can present it to the world as something they might get off to. But first it had to hit me." Glasco believes that sending his paintings into the world carries a lot of responsibility. “It is 3 responsibil ity to send that work off into the world and say, ‘This is me. This is a reflection of me,’ be cause people are af fected by art without them even knowing it. It affects them very deeplv without their even knowing it. I t gets into their clothes, into their living rooms, into their houses, into their chil dren, into their relationships." Long, on the other hand, paints with very definite intentions: he knows before he starts what a painting will look like, and what it should communicate to the viewer. “When 1 go io my studio, I spend tw r o days sweeping and stuff,” he said. “I have to go through this rit ual. Once I sit down, paintings come to me and they don't come real subtly. I mean thev come in the mid dle of the night like claps of thunder. “You know, I've said this before and I’m se- rious that I’ve had paintings wake me up in the middle of the night because it was so noisy. So I know what I’m going to do when I sit down in the studio. I usually know the title and everything about the painting.” “Faceless America” was a turning point for Long. “It was one of these paint ings that sort of crept up on me,” he said. “It was one of those few paintings that was not a clap of thunder. Techni cally, I consider the other painting (“Family”) a much better painting. “Faceless America” was the first big painting I ever did. That paint ing taught me all the things I utilize now in my paintings. “Basically, it’s a giant water- color because it's all these va porous thin washes done that you’re actuallv seeing the white of the canvas through.” Rather than painting heads, Long used mirrors. “I wanted to bring the viewer another dimension,” he said. “Somehow, I wanted them to spend more than tbe four seconds that they said people spend before paintings. I wanted them to spend eight seconds. And it happens.” Long said he’s seen people sit and look at themselves in the mirrors. He got a laugh out of one woman who used a mirror to make up her face. see page 13