Dike Blair
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Again: Selected Interviews and Essays
Design:Mehmet Irdel
CAMERON MARTIN'S BLACK SUN
by Dike Blair

The three paintings pictured here, seemingly identical acrylic nocturnes, are from Cameron Martin's Black Sun series and are intended to function as a single work. The image of a rock outcropping occupies about half of each canvas, framed by a graduated, inky atmosphere. Their perfect matte surfaces reflect, especially from a distance, a lunar-metallic light. They appear to be rendered in near-perfect photorealism, but, as one moves closer, the image fragments into small gray contour areas that have been built by masking and spraying, and there's evidence of hand brushwork as well. As one looks longer and more carefully, the variations among the paintings become evident. The tonalities subtly shift between warm and cool, and comparable areas have slightly different degrees of resolution and value. Although they are painted in 14 shades of black and gray, color arises out of the different blacks: mars, carbon, and transoxide. While there's a significant labor investment here, the paintings' technical grace and precision keep them from feeling labored. These paintings, like all of Martin's, are steeped in romanticism, yet just as clearly they are products of an analytic eye and a trained and restrained hand.

My experience of Martin's paintings is always related to time. I've written before about how his work, while very much of the present, flirts with history painting and sci-fi futurism. Here, the notion of time is embedded in the geological subject matter and the aforementioned time implicit in their making, but an added dimension of time arises from the controlled cross-referencing between photography and painting. One automatically assumes that the image's sources are photographic, captured from a single perspective, and so differences between images would involve the time implicit in taking multiple stills. It's possible that these same rocks, presumably of this planet, were photographed minutes apart, perhaps as the moon ascended. Or, forgetting the short history of the photographic medium for a second, these images could have been captured decades, or centuries, or even eons ago (if, for example, they are moon rocks) and their differences are due to erosion over time. But these are paintings, not photographs, and their differences might also reference the history of painting. Possibly Martin is engaged in a kind of Impressionist, Monet-haystack thing, only with minutely calibrated light shifts rather than Monet's broader atmospheric tricks. Martin's recent residency at Giverny would suggest that this reading isn't pure baloney. Regardless, these paintings are certainly about the time of photography, the time of painting, and about the painted image.