ANNE PERETZ IN THE LAND OF ISRAEL by anne peretz

BY RICHARD McBEE
THE JEWISH PRESS MAGAZINE
JUNE 29, 2001

One of the conceits of Modernism is that it claims that Art can be solely about itself, devoid of polluting references to the world of daily life and human foibles. One refuge of the artist is landscape painting where the subjects themselves, land, trees and sky, are sufficiently independent of complex and tainted subject matter. I would take issue with this understanding and simply state that all human action, and especially Art, is colored by human conceptions and ideas. The choices artists make as to what to paint, where and how, are reflections of underlying ideologies and understandings. Simply put, artists as social beings and as creators are always enmeshed in meanings even when painting the most elementary subjects.

I believe that this becomes clear upon viewing the elegant and insightful paintings of the Land of Israel by Anne Peretz, currently at the Salander-O’Reilly Galleries. There are 16 landscape paintings exhibited here, all of which but four are the product of a recent four-month trip to Israel. The other paintings are all wonderful evocations of misty tree-lined ponds and seaside cliffs depicting landscapes of Cape Cod.

Even before you check the titles, you immediately know that these four are almost certainly not from Israel. While Israel has many diverse types of landscapes, these would have been totally atypical of the Middle East. And in exactly the same way, the remaining landscapes and additional scenes from Jaffa and Jerusalem are absolutely Israel.

The Israeli landscapes are simply of rocky hillsides, with or without hilltop villages. Each painting evokes a very specific Israeli type of landscape. The light is intense even though the sky is overcast in all the paintings. In two small paintings, “Ayalon Park I” and “Ayalon Park II,” the sand colored hills are dotted with dull-green brush and white boulders. These hills, simple, rugged and un-picturesque, are outlined against the cool grayish blues of distant hills. These are classic naturalistic Israeli landscapes.

“Gabel-Mukaber” is a diptych (a two panel painting meant to be seen together). This painting continues the theme of the rugged Judean landscape with the addition of a small village of white houses rising majestically on the crest of the hill. In the larger left panel, the effect of the houses, slightly too large for the overall scale of the olive trees further down the slope, gives an enhanced sense of physical presence and emotional scale to this panel. Meanwhile, the right panel beautifully depicts the pure landscape as it continues down the hill, into orchards, terraced fields and more distant hills. The contrast of near and far in conjunction with inhabited and uninhabited landscape creates a narrative tension emphasized by the split image. Why did the artist choose to split this scene? Simply visual interest?

Perhaps we can take this diptych at face value as a painting of a land divided; divided between habitation and nature, that which is claimed and occupied and that which is counter-claimed. These contrasts and divisions are played out in the depictions between the cool valley with cypress trees and irrigated fields and the aloof, hot white and cream colored houses that survey the surrounding landscape from the top of the hill.

These themes of division and contrasts are further developed in the second room of the gallery containing exclusively Israeli landscapes.

Here there is a view, from above, of an Arab village. The squat square houses are barely distinguished from the rocky land. This painting has a very high horizon line, only allowing us a small glimpse of faint blue sky in the upper right hand corner of the painting. 

A larger painting, “Ayalon Park III” (60” X 70”) commands the room. This powerful painting of the foothills of the Judean Mountains emphasizes the rocky arid land with thick paint roughly applied. It is hard and unforgiving, much like the land itself. And similar to the other paintings in this exhibition, it must be experienced in person to fully appreciate the raw strength of paint on canvas that evokes the primal and desolate landscape. The hillside is populated with boulders, white and light gray, that sit massively, some of them out-cropping from the dusty earth, others clearly on the surface. The only relief in this hard scene is the occasionally sage-colored bush that helps to delineate the contours of the hill as it rises to meet the more distant hills beyond.

The full meaning of the exhibition is finally revealed upon viewing “On the Road to Jerusalem,” another large diptych (78” X 78”). Here the land is seen in its most elemental form, rising up in a violent surge to become rocky ridges of white rocks interspersed with the green brush. The horizon is high, softly meeting the purplish range in the distance, and again the scene is divided with the more distant landscape depicted on the right panel, while the left panel is very close and imposing. In spite of these distinctions, the two sides are so similar, both uninhabited and wild, that we immediately wonder why divide the painting at all. In contrast to “Gabel Mukaber” from the next room, the division of this scene becomes an issue unto itself.

Whether she intended it or not, the artist has produced a quiet and yet penetrating commentary on the Land of Israel. The diptych, “On the Road to Jerusalem,” speaks about how the beautiful, whole and complete land is divided by different perspectives imposed by different politics and different ideologies. This meaning is arrived at only in the context of her other paintings. “Avalon Park III” is so consumed with the rockiness of the land; the literal presence of these big white boulders strewn on the rough hillside, it immediately relates to the first diptych we saw, “Gabel Mukaber” in which the white boulders have become the collected white houses on the hilltop. Israel is a land in which the habitations are as rooted as the very stones themselves. Yet the land is divided by lines arbitrarily drawn in the midst of competing claims.

Anne Peretz has painted not only powerful and evocative paintings of Israel, but also evoked, by the relationships between individual paintings and by dividing some of these paintings into two panels, an enormous love and concern for the Land of Israel. She has also shown just how much meaning can be sustained in a few simple landscapes of rocky hills that happen to be one people’s homeland.

 

A SENSE OF PLACE by anne peretz

BY ANGELA LEVINE
THE JERUSALEM POST
MAY 26, 2000

Landscape painters newly arrived in this country are faced with a double challenge: how to deal with a glaring light which bleaches colors, blurs contours, and throws up strong black-and-white contrasts; and how, sidestepping the merely picturesque, to render a countryside rich in biblical and symbolic associations already immortalized – or banalized – by scores of artists, past and present.

After many previous visits to this country, this challenge was recently taken up by Anne Peretz, an American artist who divides her time between Cambridge, Massachusetts, and Truro, Cape Cod, and who shows regularly at New York’s Salander-O’Reilly Gallery.

The results of this confrontation are now on display in the Jaffa gallery from whose rooftop Peretz painted traditional scenes of white buildings set against sea and sky. However, her main offering is a set of large panoramic views of the hills ringing Jerusalem.

These well constructed compositions, apparently based on Cezanne’s “rules” for achieving balance and harmony, reach their peak in Peretz’s monumental painting of the abandoned village of Lifta, where snaking paths encircle clumps of primitive stone dwellings and the hillside seems to—

From a catalog available in the gallery, one notes that Peretz employed an abundance of gray-greens and cobalt-blues for her paintings of Cape Cod ponds and dunes in different seasons and weathers. The palette she has adopted for her Jerusalem landscapes is strikingly different. To obtain the washed-out appearance of the scenery and the extreme paleness of the stony terrain, she has employed copious amounts of white paint, either in an almost unadulterated state or added lavishly to ochres and burnt umbers.

Although these paintings are worked up from photographs and/or small outdoor studies (also on view), facile representation of the landscape is avoided by a generally successful combination of realistic detail and both impressionist and expressive passages of painting. Interest is also held by varied paintwork (brush, knife and drippings) and by textural variations achieved on occasion by mixing sand into the oils.

The best of these landscapes project a sense of loneliness and desolation. Considered within the context of the history of local landscape painting (from the drawings of Anna Ticho and Leopold Krakauer to the Jerusalem landscapes of Avigdor Arikha) all this is nothing new. But for a visiting artist accustomed to depicting skies and landscapes gentler and less demanding than our own, it ranks as a real achievement. (Horace Richter Gallery, Jaffa) Till June 8. 

 

ANNE PERETZ, SALANDER-O’REILLY GALLERIES by anne peretz

BY GRACE GLUECK
THE NEW YORK TIMES
MARCH 19, 1999

ANNE PERETZ, Salander-O’Reilly Galleries, on East 79th Street, (212) 879-6606 (through March 27). Vigorous structure and evocative moods inform these intense, well wrought landscapes of Cape Cod, where Ms. Peretz spends her summers, and of the coast of Spain. In several canvases devoted to Horseleach Pond in Truro, Mass., where she swims daily and knows every nuance of the pond and its woodsy setting, she shows the same patch of trees and water affected variously by slashing rain, a blazing sunset and the cool blue tones of evening. The steep and angled sides of a stone quarry in Tamarlu, Spain, are toned from white to robust ocher by the play of light upon them. And in several studies of feathery trees along the Spanish coast, with water visible between and behind them, she creates a feeling of time suspended by nature. It’s refreshing to see a style so unaffected by style.

 

ANNE PERETZ by anne peretz

BY SARAH SCHMERIER
SALANDER O’REILLY GALLERIES
AUG. 1999

Anne Peretz is a student of nature, specifically the sort found in Truro, Cape Cod. Located near land’s end, where the Atlantic mercilessly pounds one shore while Cape Cod Bay gently laps the other. Truro has inspired many an artist (Hopper was a resident, as is Peretz). In the lion’s share of the 18 oil works on display here, Peretz explores her love of the place’s austerity and abundance.

These pieces are concerned less with verisimilitude than with meditating on nature and its moods. Horse Leach Pond II describes an estuary in dark, marshy greens; a bright sky lights it from behind, adding an aura of mystery. In Truro Dune, thatches of Cape foliage are almost indistinguishable from the rocks to which they cling. In this sort of clime, the work seems to say,  beauty is born of survival.

Best here are the triptychs, which possess a cinematic feel when read from left to right. In one, a cliff-like outcropping rises dramatically against the ocean, starting below the horizon and ending above it. In another, a high, grassy dune slopes gradually downward to reveal a tiny wind-battered fence set against a massive grey sky wet with salt air. In person, these vistas are almost too breathtaking to take in at a glance, Peretz translates them into quiet nature walks recorded with a wide-angle lens.

These works are indebted to Cezanne in their texture and to Chinese painting in their composition. Peretz, however, is creating her own tradition here, revisiting the landscape she loves and finding endless inspiration within it.