Dorothy Hood: Celestial Voids
Dorothy Hood: Celestial Voids
McClain Gallery is pleased to present "Dorothy Hood: Celestial Voids," an exhibition of paintings by the late artist. This marks Hood’s second solo painting exhibition with the gallery among many other presentations since 2019. Best known for her monumental canvases that evoke fractured color fields, Hood used a similar approach in a spare and minimal series of paintings made in the 1960s to early 70s, wherein her color palette is limited to moody blues and gray washes.
The exhibition focuses on this series of paintings and expands upon a theme of weightless expansiveness also present in other works with more open palettes; the show spans the late 1960s through 1993. The works are expressive, bestowing a cosmic scale to her sensitive staining techniques. These paintings explore the artist’s groundbreaking method of abstraction, her ideas about celestial landscapes, and the deep psychological undercurrents that defined much of her practice.
A keystone for our exhibition, "Ingeli" from 1969 is a large canvas stained in gray then overpainted in warm sienna and burnt ochre tones. The upper half of this vertical composition features Hood’s characteristic fractures, made using tape and other materials to disrupt the flow of her thinned grisaille pigments. The angular and chopped lines are followed by surprisingly bright orange and pink passages, earthy green scoops and black paint tucked throughout the mostly brown of Hood’s overpaint. The result, with its vertiginous streak of gray plunging and thinning toward the bottom edge of the canvas, is spectacular.
As a counterpoint to this muscular and powerful painting, the "Illuminated Gray" series, punctuating the latter part of the exhibition, veers toward a bluer tone of flowing paint. The compositions in this group of works are stripped down to spilling washes, interrupted by delicate forms that appear in the under layers. Some of these shapes are in-painted, resulting in floating and groundless objects in a breadth of ultramarine. Hood cleverly utilizes the direction of her pours to create a sense of weightlessness and reversal: the call of the void, as it were, moves up, down, or sideways across the room, sending us skittering through the cosmos.
With this presentation we hope to hone the understanding of Dorothy Hood's prolific career and the seemingly infinite source of ideas she engaged with. While her talent as a colorist is hailed widely, her contributions to a minimalist methodology and quietly surreal abstraction remain under-observed. "Celestial Voids" aims to fill this quiet chamber.
"Space fascinated her, perhaps as an embodiment of the Void."
- Life in the Abstract by Lisa Gray, Houston Press
Dorothy Hood. Photo by Curtis McGee
Dorothy Hood, Mexico City, early 1940's