Alison Van Pelt’s relationship to photographic images is quite direct   and unapologetic, as well. Carefully choosing images that interest her,   she manually copies them, simply painting what she sees, and often   manipulating and enlarging their scale. So far, there is little by way   of innovation; earlier painters did this as a matter of procedure. In   traditional representational painting, the image on the surface of the   canvas was a mere analog to the image on the surface of the photographic   emulsion, only the painting was done by hand, as if that gave it an   edge of superiority. Modern artists had a choice; accept the surface of   the image as it had been since Alberti – as a window onto the world –  or  challenge that surface for what it was: a fraud, a simulacrum, a   fiction. Neither realist paintings nor photographs are “windows to the   world” or “portals of perception.” They are simply surfaces which   someone has played with, regardless of their chemicals or techniques.
Interrupt that surface, alter it, transform it, however, and  something  deeper may be gotten to Man Ray knew that in the 20s when he  solarized  his photographs, making us look more deeply upon their  surfaces. Lucas  Samaras knew it in the 70s when he physically disturbed  his Polaroids’  emulsions before they dried. Van Pelt also knows this,  and here, she  breaks from slavish appropriation of the photographic  image. While her  faithful rendition of her source is still wet, its oils  not yet set in  their ways, she takes a dry brush to subtly blend,  striate, blur, and  dematerialize her forms until, as it were, they  become mere Platonic  shadows or suggestions or hints of themselves.  Hidden within the  surface of the paint and not atop the canvas, her  subjects take on an  essential quality of becoming, of yet to be  finished, of possibilities  rather than definitions, Caught in some  viscous primal ooze, embryonic,  dreamlike as in a dense fog, her images  appear more within our vision  than without, or as if they were projected  from us outwardly upon the  external retinal field from some deep recess  of memory.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
