OEUVRE

 

Artist Series

 

by Renee Radell

At various times in her 70-year painting career, Renee Radell has created  artist series from painting ideas that range from landscapes , to abstract music painting to more complex allegorical themes steeped in symbolism and at times, surrealism . 

 

In excerpts from Renee Radell Web of Circumstance, award-winning author and art critic Eleanor Heartney provides not only descriptive information about several key artist series pictured below, but insightful narrative about Renee Radell’s use of symbolism, surrealism and allegory.

 

Artist Series: Walk in the Park

 

“Adam and Eve reappear in one panel of the series, Walk in the Park (2011). Again the theme is the journey through life, this time using the metaphor of the forest glen. This series follows groups of figures walking through groves of trees or standing in clusters among dense foliage. The series conjures up the opening line of Dante’s Inferno, in which the narrator finds himself lost, in the middle of life, in a dark forest. For Dante the forest represented the plunge into the uncertainties of middle age, which became, for his narrator, a journey through heaven, hell and purgatory. For Radell as well, the forest represents a place of self-discovery and a journey that may be simultaneously frightening, exhilarating and deeply transformative.

 

Artist Series: Carnival of Flight

 

“Closely related to the Walk in the Park paintings is the Carnival of Flight (2010) series. Here groups of figures dance exultantly within a forest. In some paintings they hold hands, forming a circle in a manner that brings to mind Matisse’s The Dance. In other paintings, they break apart to dance in pairs or singly, and in one painting they seem to turn from dancing to fleeing from, or being drawn toward, the unknown. The series culminates in Wishing Well (2010), in which dancers encircle a vortex in the sky – the wishing well of the title. There is both a promise of dream fulfillment and a hint of danger here, reminding us that life itself is a mix of peril and pleasure.”

 

A painting of two people standing in the woods
Walk in the Park 4 2011 oil on canvas 54 x 42 in.

 

Artist Series: The Puppet House

 

“In the early 1990s, Radell created a series of paintings that ultimately formed a loose narrative she titled The Puppet House. The Puppet House series developed into an allegory of the awakening of the creative imagination and its ongoing resistance to the neutralizing power of reason.  The initial inspiration for the series was a puppet she discovered in the window of a folk-art shop in New York. This wooden toy, a dapper, stylized boy in a sailor-like costume, became the protagonist in a narrative that brought to life the numerous objects that populate the shelves in her studio.

 

Other characters appeared, including Charlotte, a detached doll’s head who eventually becomes a real girl; a King and Queen who preside over the world, brought to life by the imagination; and a wooden bird who assists the escape from reason. The only genuine human in the series, aside from Radell herself, who presides over the unfolding drama from its outset in The Introduction  (1990) is her husband Lloyd. As The Visitor (1994), he is admitted into the inner sanctum of the story, just as he has always been the privileged observer of the works unfolding in his wife’s studio.”

 

In addition to these allegorical artist series, Renee Radell has created series using  painting themes of portraits, heads, brides, “plantscapes”, “Raindrops”, landscape in both Europe and the United States, and several abstract ideas such as abstract music painting.  

 

 

Walk in the Park

 

A painting of a woman in black and white
Walk in the Park 3 (detail) 2011 oil on canvas 72 x 54 in.
A person painting on the wall of an art gallery.
The artist in her New York studio ca. 2011
A painting of many naked people in the jungle
Walk in the Park 8 2011 oil on canvas 24 x 18 in.
A painting of people standing in front of leaves.
Walk in the Park 11 2011 oil on canvas 66 x 54 in.
A painting of three people walking through the leaves
Walk in the Park 1 2011 oil on canvas 54 x 42 in.
A painting of many people in the middle of a forest.
Walk in the Park 3 2011 oil on canvas 72 x 54 in.

 

Carnival of Flight

 

A painting of seven people in the sky
Wishing Well 2010 oil on canvas 52 x 52 in.
A painting of many naked people dancing
Carnival of Flight 3 2010 mixed media on canvas 22 x 40 in.
A painting of people running in the dark
Carnival of Flight 4 2010 mixed media on canvas 22 x 40 in.
A painting of five naked people dancing in the dark.
Carnival of Flight 1 2010 mixed media on canvas 22 x 40 in.
A painting of people dancing in the woods
Carnival of Flight 2 2010 mixed media on canvas 22 x 40 in.

 

The Puppet House

 

A painting of a woman and some bottles
The Introduction 1990 oil on linen 36 x 48 in.
A painting of a man 's face with a nose ring.
Watcher 1 1994 oil on linen 11 x 11 in.
A painting of a woman with her hands on the face.
Watcher 2 1994 oil on linen 11 x 11 in.
A painting of a man 's face with white and yellow makeup.
Watcher 3 1994 oil on linen 11 x 11 in.
A painting of an angry face with brown eyes.
Watcher 4 1994 oil on linen 11 x 11 in.
A painting of people in a room with mannequins
The Hostel 1990 oil on linen 48 x 36 in.
A painting of a child with an apple and candles.
Painting Charlotte 1991 oil on linen 34 x 22 in.
A painting of two heads and a table
The Witness 1990 oil on linen 48 x 36 in.
A painting of a pig and some horses
The Benediction 1990 oil on canvas 36 x 48 in.
A painting of two people dancing in front of other people.
Reason Held Hostage 1990 oil, paper and crayon on linen 52 x 78 in.
A painting of two people in an open cave
Envelopment 1992 oil on linen 72 x 52 in.
A painting of two people falling down
The Escape of R. Drue 1992 oil, crayon, fabric on linen 77 x 52 in.