LA CIENEGA AREA
- Share via
Raymond Saunders has enjoyed near-cult status in the Bay Area for the past decade or so. But only recently has he figured out how to send an essentially small-scale lyrical vision roaming fearlessly over big, black multi-canvas spaces.
In “East to West,” one canvas holds a rubbery black protrusion, a cadenza of loopy drips and a thick pink sludge, cracked like caked mud and subsiding into a sort of alluvial basin. Nudging alongside this painterly celebration, the other canvas offers a worldly mix of colored, torn and patterned papers (a William Morris-style flowered wallpaper, a fragment of orange crate label, Oriental calligraphy) and one of the artist’s leitmotifs: tentative, chalky numerals, partly erased and scribbled out, like a once-reliable mantra that no longer works.
Much of Saunders’ appeal lies in his effortless juggling of small, disparate elements into a sensuous, eye-teasing package. But in his most personal work--simultaneously about childhood and being black--he risks a sentimental veneer to get closer to the bone. The small boy with the delicately outlined skull and tender ear who hides behind the mountainous silhouette of a woman in “In a Black Landscape” is one memorable result. (Hunsaker/Schlesinger Gallery, 812 N. La Cienega Blvd., to Nov. 7.)
More to Read
The biggest entertainment stories
Get our big stories about Hollywood, film, television, music, arts, culture and more right in your inbox as soon as they publish.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.