ROLAND REISS – 1968

Posted on 2015-09-28

Having taken his MA at UCLA in 1957, Roland Reiss moved to Boulder and joined the art faculty of the University of Colorado. In his studio practice, by the late 1950s, Reiss sought to replace the gestural excesses of ‘action painting,’ in an effort to make his work more dimensional and sculptural. As new materials became available to artists in the early 60s, Reiss began work with acrylic paints and plastics (notably Plexiglas), foams, and resin. He created the work exhibited here – a breakthrough series of fiberglass and resin “paintings” in 1968. With titles like Red Slide and Bent Field, the molded resin surfaces are textured in positive or negative relief hexagons that Reiss sprayed in bright colors like red, green, and orange. The result is an ever -shifting and vibrational color field.

These pivotal works are among the first sculptural resin paintings: produced by Roland Reiss in Colorado, in synchronicity with both the Light and Space and Finish Fetish movements in Southern California. Despite the optical dynamism, there is a minimalism to the work that relates to the monochromatic oil and beeswax panel paintings produced by Brice Marden in New York at the same time. In essence, by 1968, the painting became a perceptual object.

Opposite – Red Slide, 1968

Exhibition runs through to October 10th, 2015

Diane Rosenstein
831 North Highland Avenue
Los Angeles
CA 90038

www.dianerosenstein.com