Other Dimensions
In an Essay for "Abstract Expressionism; Other dimensions" Jeff Wechsler position's Vincent Pepi's work as the antithesis of his peers tendency to work with large canvases. Wechsler notes small-scale abstractions, like this one painted in 1950 while Pepi was in Rome, which was-according to Wechsler- a crucial time in the development of the New York School.--Geographical destiny can be just as severe when a New York artist leaves New York at the wrong time, art historically speaking. This occured to a young, talented artist named Vincent Pepi, who may be used to represent any number of artists who traveled abroad during the late 1940's. Pepi's first absence from New York was not for artistic reasons; he served in the U. S. Navy from May 1944 to July 1946. In 1948, however, he studied in Mexico city, and in 1949 he decided upon further study abroad in Rome that continued through 1951. By chance, 1949 was the year Pepi reached a mature abstract style, but his art could not be seen in New York. From the first Pepi seems to have preferred small formats and media traditional to that scale, gouache and watercolor. But his work displays a fine understanding of the formal principles of gestural abstraction and a spontaneous linearity that contradicts traditional usages of those media.
His paintings in oil also show an absorbtion of the gestural and fragmented field modalities of contemporary Abstract Expressionism. Greta Berman's essay written to accompany a recent solo show of Pepi's paintings ( the artist's first since the 1960's, and held not in New York, but in Santa Fe), incidentally reviews many of the personality traits and career histories of painters of small scale abstractions. -
"Pepi separated himself from other artists of his time, since he felt uncomfortable with the New York "art Scene", and was never certain where he fit in (though it is clear from today's vantage point that he fit right in the center). He attended the "Club" from time to time, but preferred his own studio and a more solitary existence... Pepi's art certainly posseses affinities with other New York School Action painters, but retains its own uniquiness. His choice to live in Italy from1949 to 1951, as well as his preference for painting in a consistently smaller format may have obscured the recognition and fame that might have been his."
Pepi has acquired the habit of jotting down written notes- short remarks or lengthy essays-- in his sketch pad whenever his thoughts so move him. In a recent effort, he stated: " I have been very much pre-occupied with this idea of size for some time now. I have some strong convictions about this subject.... Everything I do in art I wish to resolve in the interest of art- and not in the interest of self aggrandizement., or self importance, or for personal gain.... A work of 8 x 10 inches can have the monumentality of a work 8 x 10 feet.... Let us beware of the art work that looms up at us in overwhelming proportions.... There is no rule for size- except beware of charlatans of art always go big and not small. With a philosophy like that, and a few crucial years spent in Italy, one can see how Pepi' art could escape public attention."
--excerpted from: "Abstract Expressionism, Other Dimensions"/An introduction to small
scale painterly abstraction in America, 1940---1965. / Essay by Jeffrey Wechsler
Image-Rome 507A, 1950. Watercolor, 14 x 10 x 1 inches
