Caravaggio meets de Kooning in the recent paintings of Tibor Csernus, and the results are curious, engaging, brilliant, incoherent, banal. Csernus, who’s in his mid-sixties, is better known in Paris (where he moved from his native Hungary in 1964) than he is in New York, but he has had a following here at least since the mid-Eighties, when Joe Shannon put him in his “Representation Abroad” show at the Hirshhorn and the painter Jack Beal published an open letter to Csernus in
Arts Magazine. The paintings that Csernus exhibited in the Eighties were existentialized Caravaggio: the dramatically gloomy settings were the whole story. Csernus’s nudes, spotlit in the deep black nowhere, were downcast nobodies doing nothing much. In the paintings from the past couple of years that Csernus exhibited at Steibel Modern in March and April the palette has lightened up, the brushwork has loosened up, and the compositions are airily intricate. (This is Csernus’s way of de Kooningizing Caravaggio.) It’s still difficult to say what anybody is doing, but if the subject is the lack of connection between people, then at least Csernus has made it a more interesting subject by gathering together a larger cast of characters who then fail to connect.
Caravaggio rethought High Renaissance figure composition in terms of naturalistic body language.
Caravaggio rethought High Renaissance figure composition in terms of naturalistic body language. The results were uneven, ranging from the thrilling, alarming immediacy of the Crucifixion of Saint Peterin