Review:
Sandra Gottlieb
“City Tulips”
The language of flowers is
a tricky one for artists. Delicate blooms have proved irresistible subjects
at least since Pompeian muralists frescoed the interiors of their wealthy
patrons’ villas in ancient times. In 17th-century Holland, certain painters
specialized only in canvases of flowers, and more recently personalities
as diverse as Georgia O’Keeffe and Andy Warhol have put their stamp on
distinctive kinds of floral imagery. Just when it seems there is nothing
left to say on the subject along comes an artist with a wholly fresh take.
Photographer Sandra
Gottlieb was walking in her East Side Manhattan neighborhood last spring
when she spied a bed of tulips surrounding a pear tree. Such small flowerbeds
planted inside black ironwork enclosures along the sidewalks are not unfamiliar
sights for New Yorkers, but something about the quality of the late-morning
sunlight falling on delicate petals inspired her to pull out her camera.
In the next few hours she took some 350 shots, later distilling the images
to 18 for her “City Tulips” series. Inside that one small flowerbed, Gottlieb
discovered both high Baroque drama and quietly minimalist beauty. In some
of the photos, the petals curl seductively inward, coyly shielding the
juicy pistils and stamens, which supply their own suggestive and sexy spectacle.
In others, the flowers are spare fields of color—yellow and peach and scarlet—against
a dark green ground, delicately edged by a tremulous line. Shadows play
a major role in almost all the images, but especially in the first nine
of the series, where they have a presence almost as important as that of
the petals or other flower parts. What’s also remarkable here is the way
the photographer caught a sense of the passage of time: we can visually
follow the brief lifespan of these blossoms as they pass from early maturity
to the beginnings of decay. In just one series, Gottlieb has demonstrated
both remarkable powers of observation and a thorough mastery of her medium.
Ann Landi, ARTnews
Studio visit, July 2008
Review quote: “Inside
that one small flowerbed, Gottlieb discovered both high Baroque drama and
quietly minimalist beauty. In just one series, Gottlieb has demonstrated
both remarkable powers of observation and a thorough mastery of her medium.”
Ann Landi, ARTnews Studio visit 2008
|