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GARY LANG  at ACE GALLERY  CIRCLES / WORDS

by Joshua Triliegi


Gary Lang's Press kit tells us that he was born in Los Angeles in 1950, Lang attended 
the California Institute of the Arts. He received an MFA from Yale University in 1975, 
and a Fulbright/Hayes Travel & Research Grant to live in Barcelona for two years prior 
to settling in New York City. Lang has had more than seventy solo exhibitions in the 
United States, Austria, France, Japan, The Netherlands, and Spain. He lives & works 
in Southern California.

Matt Gleason, One of L.A.'s Independent Art critics sites that, " Painter Gary Lang 
has enjoyed a celebrated career worthy of his keen talent. Free of the burden of 
conceptual angst that plagues most artists of our era, he penetrates optical space 
in his large circular paintings that defy the nihilism of both Duchamp's mechanical spinning wheels and Jasper Johns' targets. Far from mechanized, these are exercises 
in concentration and close inspection sees an ever-present hand in the almost precise brushstrokes." 

Ah yes, very well put my compadre. In other words, this is cool art! I like IT! Bravo!

" The one thing which we seek with insatiable desire is to forget ourselves, to be 
surprised out of our propriety, to lose our sempiternal memory and to do something 
without knowing how or why; in short to draw a new circle. " 
- Ralph Waldo Emerson. (1803–1882). 

Yes, even Waldo agrees, that is, if you can find Waldo. We were looking to interview 
Mr. Lang, but like Waldo, he was unavailable for comment. 

" A circle is a simple shape of Euclidean geometry that is the set of all points in a plane that are at a given distance from a given point, the centre. " - Wikipedia 

I see, I see, o.k . Were getting somewhere.


circle  ˈsərkəl| (abbr.: cir. or circ. ) noun 1. a round plane figure whose boundary 
(the circumference) consists of points equidistant from a fixed point (the center). 
- Webster's Dictionary   

Yes, Yes, that's all true, but what about the art ?  




" You have noticed that everything an Indian does in a circle and that is because 
the Power of the World always works in circles and everything tries to be round. "  
- Black Elk, Holy Man of the Oglala Sioux 1863-1950

We have gathered that Gary Lang was born in 1950, the year that Black Elk 
moved past this world and yet, there is a small connection here, let's continue.

"When you are excited about something," Lang says, "I think you should take 
that very seriously." Mr Lang stated to Art Ltd Magazine in an interview from 
his Ojai Studio last year. I agree, that is why you will find his work & show at 
ACE Gallery in Beverly Hills on The Cover of this months BUREAU of ARTS + 
CULTURE Magazine on line. 

If you want to belong to the Art Mafia on the West Coast, You go to Cal Arts & 
indeed Gary Lang is a made man, so to speak. He's been in the game a very long 
time, working with lateral lines, triangles and circles for some amount of time. 
Visit the ACE Gallery and their site for visual examples. The Circle works are 
indeed powerful, inspiring, sometimes very exacting and other times loose, allowing 
for us to see the actual brushstrokes. As, Janet Koplos, my senior art critic from Art 
in America mentioned in 2010, "… each line is composed of pulses of color that reveal 
the depletion and reloading of his brush."   Yes, that too, is very true. 

Please Joshua, you say to yourself, tells us about the art, explain as you so often 
do what it means, think for us, please, pretty please. Tell us what to think, tells us what 
you think, ruminate on how and why it is important, give us something we can smile 
about. Help us sell this stuff. Contribute to the canon of great Art critics who all agree 
that Gary Lang is brilliant. We did that already, he's on the cover. And yes, of course 
he is brilliant, but so are you, so am I. We are brilliant and life is good. So, then why 
did Gary Lang get the cover ? And here is the part where I give in & describe his, my 
own and yours too: Brilliance. 


Because Gary Lang is focused, because he is disciplined, because he has been doing this 
thing we call ART for decades and mostly, to be honest, because I like the ART. This 
current work does have a relationship with those I have quoted & many I have not quoted. 
Circles are what we live on, well, spheres anyway. Some believe that within each being, 
each human, you will find an area of energy commonly called a CHAKRA. A sort of zone 
or area that often correlates with an ephemeral energy within each person. I believe, without 
speaking in depth with Mr Lang, that he has tapped into a fine representation of what we 
might call a chakra with his ongoing CIRCLE Series. View the books by Leadbeater 
of the 1930's, to see what I mean. Standing alone in the gallery, in front of a Gary Lang 
Circle can seem dizzying. The works are alive, they throb, they orb, they breath in and 
out. Not like a silly optical art experiment, but organically, they move. The retina of 
ones eye [ not a reference to ONE the group, just 'one's' as in yours ] actually has to 
do some serious work to deal with the amount of color information that the viewer is 
dealing with. Mr. Lang has done this with lateral stripes and again with triangles, but 
the circles, take the cake, as it were. Years ago, I recall standing in front of a medium 
sized painting [8 foot] as compared to say his eleven foot paintings currently on view. 
The effect was nothing less than mesmerizing. His current works are iconic to the degree 
that, like the work of BUREAU Artist Ron Riehel, they are so lovingly crafted, they could 
substitute for 'religious icons from another planet', to steal a line from my own description 
of Mr. Riehel's show from 1996. Artists today, must find something they are very serious 
about and be excited about it, to flip Mr. Lang's advice. He has done just that with this Art.


Which brings us back to circles. Native Americans, Mathematicians, Scientists, 
and if there is a god, which there might be & I don't want to turn off any readers 
that don't believe there is a god, whoever and whatever contributed to the great 
creation of this planet and indeed the universe, somehow, wether out of design or 
out of convenience or out of necessity, utilized the sphere/circle to make it happen. 

So did Gary Lang, Jasper Johns, Richard Long, Newell Harry and me and you and 
just about everyone that we know has drawn a circle and enjoyed doing it. Kepler 
obsessed over circles in his search to define the orbits of the planets, which led to 
Newton, which led to Einstein, its endless, the work we do, based on the work 
somebody else has done. So then, what is this thing called ART ? Why do we do it ? 
I cant answer for Gary Lang, he was unavailable for comment prior to my deadline.  

I will say this, Art: painting, sculpture printmaking, the application and craft of 
expressing ones self is something we humans need to do, it feels good to do it, 
and if we did it correctly, it makes others either feel good, or at least understand 
what it was we were feeling, and in some cases, the effect is sorrow, pain, sadness,
because that is the life's experience, that is the human experience, that is the gamut 
of emotions we go through on this planet, this very round planet that from a distance, 
looks like a circle. This particular example of creating Circles is much more than cool,
it is partially undefinable in text. In other words, I can't actually tell you how damn 
cool this stuff is, you have to visit the Art Gallery yourself, see it for yourself. The 
great New York Painter and World Class Filmmaker Julian Schnabel derives often,
the need to see the work in person, so true, so true, in this case especially true. Art 
is kinda weird like that, so are those that make the stuff, that's why we do it, because, 
were never quite sure how it is going to end up upon completion. Not unlike this 
extremely weird and unorthodox art essay. Which is clearly not as pretty as a Gary Lang 
painting. Not as focused as a Richard Long Sculpture, Totally missed the bulls eye that 
Jasper Johns painted so vividly. Clearly, not as funny as a Newell Harry piece of neon.
Possibly, just as confusing as an Eienstien Theory. Though through it all, I took Mr 
Lang's very solid advice, " When you are excited about something, I think you should 
take that very seriously."  End of discussion. End of Essay. As Shakespeare's King Lear 
might say, " The Wheel has turned full circle." See The Exhibit at ACE before April.

http://www.acegallery.net