| Exhibition
May 7th 2004
New
Paintings

Civilized Discourse
23" x 18"
Oil on Canvas
*SOLD*
I first
became aware of Steve Cieslawski shortly after opening CFM Gallery in
SoHo. Although I had a good idea of what direction I wanted it to take
in the art it showed, I was still in flux as to which artists would be
exhibited. Steve showed me some very interesting and exceedingly well-done
shadow box collages. I told him at the time that I liked them very much,
but they were 'not right' for what I was doing. I did, however, notice
an angel inhabiting the background of one of the pieces. I asked who had
originally painted it and was pleasantly surprised to hear that it was
not decoupage, but rather, an oil on board by Steve.
From that moment I
knew that Steve had to paint! With encouragement he began to paint in
earnest. Over the course of the next years he shared with me the work
he was doing and his paintings began to take on a singular life and direction
that culminated in his joining the roster of CFM Gallery Artists.
His sense of story
telling, facility with the paint and his refusal to accept anything from
himself other than his best efforts exemplify his work. As many other
great painters, past and contemporary, he has gone about creating a mythology
that, while anchored in historical prospective, is uniquely his own. The
recognition of a Cieslawski painting as being his and his alone is immediate.
It is a great honor
to be the first gallery to present Steve Cieslawski, painter.
Neil Zukerman

The Manifest World
22" X 30"
Oil on Canvas
*SOLD*
"I remember with
pleasure the visit I made to Steve Cieslawski's studio in Oaxaca some
months ago. He was preparing his current exhibition taking place in New
York and I had the opportunity not only of seeing the paintings to be
presented, but also of listening to his methods and techniques. Some time
before, I had been impressed by two of his works I had seen in a large
exhibition at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Oaxaca, Mexico. I enjoyed
those pieces very much because I considered them really - pictorially
and iconographically very interesting.
His scenarios
are mysterious and at the same time quite real. I have in mind Theater
of Memory in which perspectiva legitima - as the painters of Florentine
Renaissance used to call the method they discovered - is the main feature.
Perspective is used very poetically in this and in other paintings I saw.
In this one, the eye of the viewer meets a point, which is inside the
dark classical arch at the end of the Corridor. This is an interior scene
with personages and the light is well achieved.
In contrast, the painting
called Change of Seasons is an exterior scene, and the two presences seem
to dialogue just when the sunset takes place.
Cieslawski loves to recreate architecture, as in the properly titled Flight
of the Architect. I found this piece a bit comical because of the enormous
caryatids with their raised arms. In a clever way, they set the proportion
of the precinct in which the little figure of the man seems to hurry off
right, while carrying the maquette of San Pietro in Montorio. He seems
to be worried about possible colleagues who might steal his tempietto.
A Fateful Meeting
is also very appropriately named, since it takes a few seconds before
you realize that the meeting taking place is in Verona, involving the
face of a Madonna staring at you with her only visible eye.
In an earlier painting
called Dream Catcher, Cieslawski depicts an Angel from the Annunciation,
The Salutation of The Angel to Mary, but no Mary is there, and her absence
makes a very interesting play.
Some of the colors and settings used by the artist remind me of Caspar
David Friedrich, who can be considered a forerunner of the late 19th century
Symbolist Movement, while others are linked to Surrealism in many ways.
One can see a relationship to the imagination of Remedios Varo, as well.
Cieslawski's skies are a result, I think, of a thorough observation of
nature, and I love most of them. In Seer of Fates, the sky calls forth
one of those skies which appear in Baroque painting whenever a saint has
a revelation or has been visited by a Supernatural Being. We call this
'Rompimiento de Gloria' The Rupture of Glory. This effect is beautifully
contrasted with the icy landscape.
Indeed, it is a joy
to see paintings so carefully achieved with layers and layers and layers
of pigment, as in the paintings by Vermeer of Delft. They are pleasant
to the eye and to the mind. I wish the artist a great success with this
exhibition".
Teresa
del Conde, Director, Museo de Arte Contemporario, Mexico City
Madonna
22" x 17"
Oil on Canvas
*SOLD*
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