1983, Sean Scully, Maesta
From the museum label:
Sean Scully says that his stripes "push out into the world, trying to be more than paintings." He thinks of color and light as expressions of life, and his thick, multipaneled works are meant to create an experience that is at once physical and spiritual.
Made with bolted canvases and housepainter's brushes, Scully's paintings evoke the solidity of architecture. Yet Maesta also conjures a more transcendent realm. The work is titled after a famous multipaneled altarpiece by Duccio, the late thirteenth-century Italian painter. The power of Duccio's Maestà (1308-11) emanates from the unbroken rows of angels and saints surrounding the Virgin Mary, much as Scully's stripes, in contrasting lights and darks, appear to vibrate outward into the viewer's space.
1983, Sean Scully, Maesta
From the museum label:
Sean Scully says that his stripes "push out into the world, trying to be more than paintings." He thinks of color and light as expressions of life, and his thick, multipaneled works are meant to create an experience that is at once physical and spiritual.
Made with bolted canvases and housepainter's brushes, Scully's paintings evoke the solidity of architecture. Yet Maesta also conjures a more transcendent realm. The work is titled after a famous multipaneled altarpiece by Duccio, the late thirteenth-century Italian painter. The power of Duccio's Maestà (1308-11) emanates from the unbroken rows of angels and saints surrounding the Virgin Mary, much as Scully's stripes, in contrasting lights and darks, appear to vibrate outward into the viewer's space.