"DNA:Study:VI," 2014, is from 'McArthur Binion: DNA,' published @delmonico_books⠀ ⠀ "Seeing the work—the paintings—of McArthur Binion is to be struck in many ways, almost simultaneously, by their muted tones of gray, brown, black, blue and sometimes tones of green, and by a palette and texture the feel and atmosphere of still life," Michael Stone Richards writes. "Like the most accomplished still lifes, the paintings are the very embodiment of austerity and the ideal of an autonomous art in which it is understood that the work stands alone, resists manipulation, and is a thing among things requiring a language of appreciation unaffiliated with commodities. There is a coolness in the sense of restraint and withholding in the works, something all the more emphasized when they are seen in person in the artist’s studio or in a gallery space such as @lehmannmaupin In other words, the works do not advertise anything, they bear no striking images to pull in even the most casual of viewers… The surfaces in Binion’s works are mute, and even as one begins to perceive lines, those lines do not at first stand out as lines but rather are grasped as movements embedded in the surface. It is as if from the surface there emerge planes of uneven movement and so, yes, if there are planes there should be implied lines as well, but the planes begin to move because the lines are hand-drawn, often through and across the surface. Each work in the ongoing 'DNA' series, begun in 2013, no matter its palette or scale, is marked by a hand-drawn grid, the lines of which are not always aligned as might at first seem to be the case in, for example, works by Agnes Martin, and so can seem syncopated. This approach to the works takes time. As one is held to and held back by the surface of the works, there is a sense of being held in check at the surface, as if one is not initially invited 'into' a work where there seems to be no entry, only a gallery of surfaces, marked in every case by the presence of a grid…"⠀ ⠀ Edited with text by @nawinawinawi ⠀ Text by @_free_forms_ & @michaelstonerichards⠀ Interview by #FranklinSirmans⠀ ⠀ @mcarthurbinion #mcarthurbinion #dnapaintings #dnastudy #dna https://www.instagram.com/p/CJHJNTkJuGH/?igshid=5dcdgat7y68