Michael Raedecker
ins and outs
2000, Acrylic and Thread on Canvas
198 x 330cm |
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| ins and outs
is a sublime dream home. Steely grey in the dead of night, manicured
in the expansive landscape, trees in a straight line, boulders placed
decoratively for maximum effect: it might be the retirement retreat
of a Silicone Valley millionaire, the kind of person who would bother
to have their trees pruned into perfect orbs, who'd insist that their
sky be as delicate as a Japanese watercolour. Michael Raedecker's paintings
are always little seeds of gossip. Drawn to this house by the impossible
intensity of the light - made up of countless tiny pink and yellow threads
- the first instinct is that something suspicious is happening within.
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Michael Raedecker
destructive superstition
2004, Acrylic and Thread on Linen
198 x 330cm |
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The Dutch have always
been masters at still life. Michael Raedecker's flowers have a subtle
quality of unparalleled grace captured in a glow of intellectual order
and mathematical refinement. He presents a canvas and a half as one:
a classical and elegant subject doubled, like gliding seamlessly from
one film still to the next. The heavily rendered bouquet almost acts
as a propellant weight. Stitched delicately along the background, an
attenuate tangle of lines provides a further sense of motion. Reminiscent
of sheet music, Michael Raedecker presents a painting with the enveloping
ambience of a film complete with soundtrack.
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Michael Raedecker
beam
2000, Acrylic and Thread on Canvas
203 x 173cm |
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Michael Raedecker is
a big fan of film, especially anything with a grandiose American landscape,
the untamed freedom of the west. In beam he paints a lonely
cabin in the woods - but this is no ordinary night scene: it's almost
like the painting has been solarised. A strange halo glow radiates from
the trees, the crackling surface of the ground flickers between positive
and negative light like an unnatural frost effect. There are shadows
everywhere, distinctly pronounced in a conscious mirroring of the image:
a double painting in one. This is a scene which is impossible in nature
but completely commonplace in Michael Raedecker's imagination and in
spaghetti westerns. Raedecker got the idea from night scenes in old
cowboy flicks, which were shot in the daytime with a filter over the
lens.
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Michael Raedecker
the getaway
1997, Acrylic and Thread on Linen
185 x 152.5cm |
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Michael Raedecker paints
his woodland getaway in the night air. Breaking down the composition
to the barest colour-field essentials, he sketches in the details with
delicate stitch work: thick wool standing in for tree bark, fine silk
threads tracing the enmeshed patterns of the distant trees, the shimmering
ripples in the stream. The effect is a captivating stillness, an atmosphere
of too-quiet isolation, a setting for leisurely (or illicit) escape.
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Michael Raedecker
prop
1998, Acrylic and Thread on linen
180 x 130cm |
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Both prop
and occluded utilise the material of their media to push the
boundaries of representation: the illusion of space, the believability
of how a subject sits in a canvas. In prop, Michael Raedecker's
tree is firmly anchored to the ground by real string, as if the leaves,
by being rendered in paint and not thread, might float in their aqueous
form off the canvas.
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Michael Raedecker
occluded
1997, Acrylic and Thread on Linen
120 x 160cm |
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In occluded,
Michael Raedecker's cottage sits in a poured environment: the dappled
green background made up of layers of caked paint. He obliterates the
top half of the canvas as sky: the thick white puddle the densest part
of the painting, threatening to consume the scene with its illusionary
weight.
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Michael Raedecker
frisson
1997, Acrylic and Thread on Linen
183.5 x 142.5cm |
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Michael Raedecker's
paintings engage with craft tradition in a sophisticated way. Self-consciously
bordering on kitsch, frisson personalises the genre of epic
landscape painting. His vast mountains, created through layers of generously
poured paint possess an icing-like texture; the trees are made of thick
wool, stitched with rustic gusto. The sparkling highlights glitter in
the snow from embedded lengths of metallic twine. Through his folksy
technique, Michael Raedecker draws intimate connotation to his sublime
theme: he portrays this vast emptiness with the cold comfort of homeliness.
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Michael Raedecker
still
1997, Oil, Acrylic, Veneer and Thread on Linen
120 x 160cm |
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Michael Raedecker's
paintings of houses and landscapes are situated in a nowhere place.
Intimately familiar scenes are estranged from recognisable tangibility,
made distantly remote through their conscious resistance to ‘being'.
In still, Raedecker's garage door has the subliminal quality
of a mirage. From the blank suggestion of the grey ground, tangled threads
‘grow' as if by their own accord and the wood tile is conspicuous
by its ready-made sourcing. Raedecker's image emerges from the tautology
of the materials: it's the physicality of the surface which gives rise
to its chimerical effect.
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Michael Raedecker
deep
1998, Acrylic and Thread on Linen
56 x 76cm |
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Themes of solitude,
tranquillity and emotional isolation run through Michael Raedecker's
work. In his paintings, Raedecker conceives nature as an idealised environment,
both as a luxurious privilege of escapism and a sinister realm of the
foreign. In deep, he paints a fragmented view of a lake. The
solid steely blue surface seduces in its rich colour, the texture of
ripples is formulated by painting over stitched designs. Michael Raedecker
fabricates this scene with attenuate sensitivity to the painting's surface,
as if trying to postpone the inevitable thought of what lies beneath.
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Michael Raedecker
room 5
1997, Oil, Acrylic, Veneer and Thread on Linen
60 x 70cm |
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In room 5
Michael Raedecker creates the sensation of deadened slumber. Space is
an important focus in his work. In this small painting, the dark colours
have a calming effect: their claustrophobic intensity suggests the infinity
of internal space, an endless numbness of psychological tension. Michael
Raedecker gives a sense of paralysing weight in the chunkiness of the
bed and tables; the lamp above the bed seems to bend under this sinking
pressure.
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Michael Raedecker
room 4
1997, Oil, Acrylic, Veneer and Thread on Linen
60 x 55cm |
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Nature is often used
as a symbol of emotional solitude in Michael Raedecker's work. In room
4, his furnishings float tenuously against the beige ground: there's
a sense that this scene has been transplanted to a barren desert. Michael
Raedecker literally fixes these elements in place with crude stitching
as if to confirm their existence isn't a dream. The small picture above
the bed is reminiscent of Raedecker's later landscape paintings; it
lends a further confusion between the idea of interior and outdoor space.
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Michael Raedecker
room 2
1997, Oil, Acrylic, Veneer and Thread on Linen
55 x 65cm |
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Michael Raedecker's
early paintings of hotel rooms reveal the artist's elaborate conception
of reality and illusion. Completing his painted surface with collaged
elements of veneer and yarn stitching, Michael Raedecker's room
2 is represented pictorially as well as through the texture of
the materials: real wood is representative of panelling, the fabric
of the curtains is alluded to with actual stitching. The suggestion
of a table and the tiny embroidered white spray give way to a sense
of ephemeral disintegration: a suggestion of loneliness, isolation and
forgotten rendezvous.
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Michael Raedecker
shot
1997, Acrylic and Thread on Linen
50 x 70cm |
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The notion of time is
a predominant interest in Michael Raedecker's work. His empty, haunting
images are often compared to film. The studied framing of his canvasses
suggests immanent drama: they operate like the in-between scenes of
a continuous yet illusive narrative. The mystique of Raedecker's work
lies in the negative space. In shot, Raedecker painstakingly
embroiders the lines defining the scene. Through this time-consuming
process, Michael Raedecker doesn't paint the image itself, but rather
the space of its suggestion.
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Michael Raedecker
scene
1997, Acrylic and Thread on Linen
50 x 60cm |
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In scene, Michael
Raedecker paints the ghost of a house, its banal form conspicuous by
its absence. Raedecker consciously omits the building; the subject of
his painting becomes the mysterious space surrounding the known. Raedecker
subverts the banality of the scene through the organic turbulence of
embroidered detail. The surface of his painting is a microcosm of quiet
disorder. Carefully crafted flowers and the precision of taught threads
constructing the architecture lend a surreal element in their fuzzy
texture; the mass of string composing the tree spills haphazardly over
the canvas, trailing lines and fissures both above and beneath the paint.
On close inspection, Michael Raedecker's paintings offer a quiet topography
in their surfaces, revealing an inner-life to scenes of common placidity. |
Michael Raedecker
Perspective
1998
Acrylic, thread, veneer on linen
137.5 x 168 cm |
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