
Two Rooms is very pleased to present a specially selected exhibition of work by James Ross that investigates his practice over the last 30 years and introduces his current constructions. The title is a direct homage to Piet Mondrian and also proclaims Colin McCahon’s notable 1961 painting, Here I give thanks to Mondrian. Ross’ research into both artists has been a productive and constructive springboard bringing about the utilization of the diamond shaped stretcher into his work. Ross posits that the use of a distorted diamond or trapezoid introduces a spatial or perspectival element into the standard static picture plane and this enables his paintings to be seen as a series of discrete parts that together make a whole. The installation of these ‘parts’ is crucial to the exhibition and the artist makes use of the architecture of the space in a novel manner, identifying the corner as a neglected area of prime spatial interest and rectifying it by making it a significant focal point.
James Ross is known for his innovative multi-panel paintings that exploit unusual contours or occasionally cut-out holes to avoid conventional rectangular formats. In the nineteen seventies he created trapezoid colour-field abstractions that alluded to the vertical human form in a landscape. In the mid nineteen eighties he developed the more baroque format for which he is now known, with a more agitated surface area and images of anamorphically distorted skulls or the moving female form, sometimes with carefully positioned isolated circular components. In the late 1990s Ross began to make more minimalist works, with drawn-on, kite-shaped, diamond forms made up of butted-up panels. These had circular or rectangular panes ofglass suspended over their painted surfaces via screws, exerting a tension on the contours below. His most recent paintings abandon the glass and have tilted coloured plywood planes projecting out from the wall, attached to it only by one edge. They are more aggressively sculptural.

Two Rooms is a contemporary art exhibition venue located in a converted warehouse in Central Auckland, New Zealand. Opened in August 2006, Two Rooms presents a program of residencies and projects by leading International and New Zealand contemporary artists. The building houses two exhibition spaces, the Project Room and the Long Room.

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