Goings on About Town
October 2018
By Andrea K. Scott

The American painter, who divides her time between Vienna and the Connecticut countryside, has been working since the mid-nineteen-eighties with one strict rule: she paints stills from movies, which she captures on her computer (and previously her VCR), an art-house take on the cerebral photo-realism of Gerhard Richter. In the past, her paintings have felt somewhat constrained, a little too cool. But her new subject, Derek Jarman’s “Caravaggio,” inspires the most beautiful work of her career, virtuosic painting about painting, as lush as a hothouse bloom. You may recognize the perennial muse Tilda Swinton, but the best pictures here are essentially portraits of a process: closeups of brushes luxuriating in swirls of salmon, crimson, and brown oil on a palette. The interplay of shadow and light has always been Eisler’s true subject, as it was Caravaggio’s. Note the bravura still-life of two flickering candles, which is one of Richter’s most famous motifs. But don’t mistake the image for an homage—think of it as a rejoinder to anyone who still thinks that great painting is a boys’ club.


Judith Eisler: Goings on About Town