Symphonic Sweep Animates the Paintings of Seco
         -by Peter Wiley


February 24 through March 18, with a reception on March 2, from 6 to 8 PM at the Chelsea Gallery.

Generally, when we hear the term "expressionism" we tend to associate it with strident color, frenzied brushstrokes, and formal distortion. However, the Mexican artist Seco, who was drawn to California both by his love of classical music and its tradition of West Coast figure painting, exemplified by artists like Richard Diebenkorn and David Park, is a unique species of expressionist. For his colors, while strong, are subtly harmonized; his brush strokes, while vigorous, are anything but strident; and his forms, while emphatic, are grounded in classical anatomy.

Thus, one encounters a new kind of formal and emotional expressiveness in Seco's exhibition of acrylics on canvas at Agora Gallery, 530 West 25th Street, in Chelsea, where Seco's exhibition can be seen from February 24 through March 18, with a reception on March 2, from 6 to 8 PM.

As a guest of both the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra and the New West Symphony, Seco had an opportunity to observe these orchestras during closed door rehearsals and capture the immediacy of music-making as few other painters have. The intimacy of the compositions that came out of this experience can only be compared to Dega's pictures of ballet dancers in rehearsal, as well as Romare Bearden's many collages of the jazz world; Seco's grasp of his subject is just that quintessential.

Indeed, in the latter regard, his painting, "Trumpet II" depicting a young horn player seated in a chair, his forelock falling in his face, the bell of his instrument pointed at the floor as he concentrates on getting a note just so, reminds one of the jazz trumpeter Chet Baker. That it actually depicts a symphonic musician, however, gives a refreshingly unbuttoned, spontaneously casual backstage view of the classical music scene than one is not often afforded.

By contrast, the sweeping horizontal composition of "Requiem III" presents us with the majesty of an entire orchestra in performance: the conductor waving his baton at the podium; the violinists sawing away with their bows in a row like a finely tuned machine in the middle distance; the shapely, almost feminine forms of a row of bass fiddles dominating the foreground, their richly polished red wood surfaces gleaming; the white formal shirtings of the musicians toward the rear appearing to rise on the tides of the music like a flock of white birds taking flight. Here, Seco invests the scene with a rhythmic grandeur which approximates in visual terms the grandeur of the music itself, his composition soaring rhythmically to the occasion in a manner that sweeps the viewer away.

Equally strong in another manner is "Passing he Page" another large canvas, albeit a vertical one, of a conductor captured in the act of turning a page of music resting on the podium while wielding his baton. What Seco has immortalized here is the dynamism of a simple, yet essential, gesture in musical creation, heightening the drama by setting the figure in his dark suit against a brilliant red background and dispensing with the more detailed treatment that we see in some of his other paintings to further heighten the effect.
In other paintings of musicians in this exhibition, as well as in a somewhat anomalous yet lovely vision of a crouching nude, Seco­­ whose ability to tell a story with paint may have to do with the fact that he is also a published author­­proves himself to be an artist possessed of singular gifts.

February 24 through March 18, with a reception on March 2, from 6 to 8 PM at the Chelsea Gallery

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