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September 26 – November 2, 2024
Opening Reception: September 26, 6pm - 8pm
515 West 24th Street
 
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It should come as no surprise that David Salle would partner with AI to create a new series of dynamically constructed paintings, the New Pastorals (2024–). This collaborative pivot marks an inflection point in a career spent scanning the image banks of popular culture and art history for striking and resonant forms, which he amalgamated into searing, disjunctive compositions. Ever attuned to developments in digital art, Salle saw AI as a readymade tool for reaching beyond what he already knew about the process of painting in his vast experience as an image maker. He also knew, as an incisive critic of the medium, that AI was not equipped to generate meaningful marks alone as it did not understand emphasis, contours, or edges. So Salle set out, in partnership with engineer Grant Davis, to construct a neural network that would be nuanced enough to tangle with his prodigious formal skills and produce the kind of internal scaffolding that makes a great painting great. At first, he educated the AI—which is activated by visual, not textual, prompts—with master works by the pantheon of artists he admires (de Chirico, Hopper, et al), enhancing the process with a dose of Arthur Dove, whose fluid passages of black pigment allowed the machine to dream in depth and dimensionality. But Salle was less interested in the appropriation of past styles as a conceptual conceit than he was in a muscular interaction with algorithmic form- making. He thus developed a new training model, one focused exclusively on his own previous work, namely the series of Pastorals from the late 1990s and early 2000s. These canvases, according to the artist, provided the perfect range of data to deconstruct and reassemble: their compositions are divided into discrete interlocking shapes; there are several distinct color palettes operating simultaneously; and they are suffused with a myriad of detail. What resulted, when the machine was torqued by a lever that determines degrees of similarity and dissimilarity, were irreal mountain landscapes populated by fragmenting bodies, vestiges of bathers and shepherds succumbing to the determinant forces of code.

Struck by the vibratory energy of the digital crenelations and accordion folds rendered by the AI, Salle engaged with these scenes as printed backgrounds for painting. Challenged by the pulverization and reconstitution of his own past production, which seemed to generate a potent, pastoral-like essence, he infused each scene with further compositional tension by enhancing their distortions and ellipses and adding new figurative fragments that disobey any sense of scale. Torsos, hands, bathing suits, cartoon suns, ladders, wood statues, and swathes of fabric (among other sundry signs of life) enmesh with the Edenic landscapes in a kind of foreplay between background and surface that takes the form of centrifugal geometry. These elements—some added anew, others rendered as further complications of the AI-generated abstractions—spiral outward. Their kinetic formation recalls that of Matisse’s The Dance (1910), itself an ode to the bucolic pastoral tradition, but the effect is more dystopic, more sci-fi. Think of the Stargate sequence from Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968), the swirling tunnel of color and light that engulfed the protagonist as he fled the murderous AI, HAL 9000. Salle’s New Pastorals are indeed “new,” meaning “of the moment,” intensely contemporary in their reflection and refraction of a lived reality increasingly entangled with the digital. While AI is Salle’s co-pilot in the creation of these enigmatic paintings, it is not, however, the source or the final arbiter of their imagery. It is a lens, in some cases a mirror that distorts reality in a carnivalesque misappropriation of the empirical world. Salle rides this wave of physical contortions, underscoring the slippages between the real and the imagined, echoing the twenty-first century’s assault on truth. Each canvas’s highly stylized matrix of imagery and vibrant color harmonies lure the viewer into the central compositional vortex, compelling them to see in circles. The effect is vertiginous viewing, a kind of motile engagement with the painting that seems almost choreographed. The New Pastorals invite you to dance, but like the bacchanals of old, they barely conceal the chaos at the heart of the universe.