“I think we’re at this point now where we can play
with paintings’ language.”
Jason Stopa
Jason Stopa
Haiku in English is an adaptation
of the formal Japanese poetic style of the same name whose major defining
characteristic is the juxtaposition of two ideas, often contradictory, within
its 17 syllables.
The blogger Maria
Calandra wrote about Jason Stopa
on her blog Pencil
in the Studio, stating “After spending more
time with them, Stopa's paintings' unique relationship to language reveals
itself, recalling Haiku poetry in particular. They have a similar directness of
description, even in their abstraction that almost hovers above their subject
matter.”
A child of the 1980’s and 90’s
Stopa’s early years were spent in New Jersey. As he told the phinery blog “My mom is Black and my dad is White. When they got
married and had us kids in the late 70s/early 80s it was pretty controversial.
They both had rough roots and we were poor growing up. I remember
our block had a crack house and prostitutes on the corner. The good ole
days, lol. But there were also these moments of hand clapping games,
watching my sisters play double dutch and playing basketball till I overheated.
It wasn’t all bad.”
Since graduating with
a MFA from New York’s Pratt institute in 2010 Stopa has show his work in
numerous group exhibitions and opened his fourth solo exhibition at the Hionas
Gallery a couple of days ago. He also writes regularly for Art in America, The Brooklyn Rail and Whitewall Magazine as
well as curating exhibitions. He is currently curating a group show for BOSI Contemporary on the Lower East Side, about which he says “Paramount to this exhibit is the artist’s capacity to employ
simplicity of form and color to create images
that are visually powerful.”
But Stopa’s
primary preoccupation is his painting. As he told Studio
Critical, “As a painter, you always want to set up parameters that don't allow
you to get bored. One of the things I'm interested in is
contradiction. It seemed like the first half of the 20th century was
about keeping metaphysics in painting - nothingness, mystery, sublime,
existentialism etc. Then the second half came along and threw it
out. I'm interested in creating an ambiguous space in a painting -
shallow depth, physicality of texture and a touch and go sense of reality. This
allows me to play, which is really what I want to do the most.”
Stopa’s current exhibition Double
Trouble is on show at New York’s Hionas
Gallery until the 25th of April.
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