by Margaret Regan

Mayme Kratz has made a 21st-century "Starry Night" in resin and root.

Vincent Van Gogh might have used oils and canvas for his midnight-blue masterpiece, but Kratz used earthy materials for her Light of Blue 1. Her translucent resin on board is colored a stellar blue, and little bits of the plant radiate through this celestial plane like so many twinkling stars.

To make her distinctive artworks--a cross between sculpture and painting--Kratz embeds lowly weeds, snake bones and yucca pods into layers of lustrous resin. The pieces are unabashedly about landscape; the irony, as she herself notes, is that they're more heavenly than earthy.

"Much of what I observe in nature ... appears stellar," she explains in an artist's statement, "and a great deal of what I view in the sky seems cellular."

The constellation of six works in the "Light of Blue" series, on view in a three-person show at Etherton Gallery, trace out a painterly sky in rhapsodic shades of blue. A flax root stands at the center of each, with the dark bark carved away to reveal a yellow interior, but the celestial blues of the resin undulate from the near-navy of No. 1 to the pale pearly blue of No. 8.

A longtime Phoenix artist who had the prestigious Stonewall solo show at the Tucson Museum of Art a half-dozen years ago, Kratz gets gorgeous colors out of her resin every time. Elsewhere, she comes up with ruby-red and maroon (Notes on Flight Nos. 5, 6, 7), delicate lavender (Book of Time) and creamy white (Bone Study). You can see through the resin to the weeds and bones floating inside; the deeper they are inside the resin, the darker they are.

In Bone Study, rattlesnake bones twist into a spiral, the snake's vertebrae like beads on a necklace. The triptych Notes on Flight curls ordinary weeds into nests. The 3-D weeds look like they're popping out the surface, but they're not: All the surfaces are smooth.

These are all wall works, but the pedestal piece Book of Time moves closer to sculpture. It also leaves behind the detritus of the natural world and instead embraces human culture. Kratz usually spends hours on the trail, collecting her bugs' wings and poppy pods, but inside this one, she's trapped pieces of human-made paper. A half-dozen sheets are suspended inside the vertical lavender slabs of resin in this rectangular box, and each piece is covered with handwriting. Scrawled over and over again on the outermost sheet are the words "waiting and waiting."

This elusive work is no doubt what gave the show its title: Notes From the Interior. The exhibition's three artists, James Reed, Jack Spencer and Kratz, all trade in elliptical narratives and ambiguities. They're linked as well by their complex processes. Kratz stands alone with her resin and weeds; Reed and Spencer both play around with photography.

DOLBY CHADWICK GALLERY
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San Francisco, CA 94108

Phone: 415.956.3560
info@dolbychadwickgallery.com
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