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Kenneth
Dingwall
Painter
Cleveland
is fortunate to have the Scottish artist Kenneth Dingwall choose
to call it home. Dingwall, currently professor of painting and chair
of the painting department at the Cleveland Institute of Art, began
there as a visiting foreign artist in 1985-87. Following a brief
stint in Zurich, he was persuaded to return more permanently to
Northeast Ohio. After serving as guest artist in Kent State University's
Blossom Summer Program in 1988, he took up his present Institute
post.
Unconcerned
with art world fads and trends, Dingwall, who trained at the Edinburgh
College of Art, has developed an impressive body of abstract works
whose roots can be traced to such renowned pioneers of modernism
as Mondrian, Malevich, and Barnett Newman. All three of these artists
demonstrated in their works that non-objectivity can incorporate
psychological and metaphysical resonance; in his own paintings Dingwall
has marshaled symmetry, order, and balance toward similar ends.
Strongly influenced by and suggestive of the patterns in nature
(bones of the human skeleton, sunlight shining on the ocean, folded
leaves), his conceptually rigorous canvases often appear mysteriously
both to grow and glow from within.

Time(s)
1994
oil/wax on canvas
14"x22" (wood panels)
With
typically Scottish depth and economy of means, Dingwall creates
subtly nuanced compositions in which each brushstroke, each mark,
each change in texture, serves as a metaphor for complex and intensely
human meaning. Frequently compared to American Minimalists such
as Frank Stella and Agnes Martin, Dingwall shares their interest
in geometric forms, but synthesizes into them reverberant intimations
of the spiritual and organic. The subject of a major traveling exhibition
of works created since 1990, co-organized by the Talbot Rice Gallery
in Edinburgh and the Cleveland Center for Contemporary Art in 199697,
Dingwall has begun to achieve the international prominence his accomplishments
deserve.
text by
Ellen G. Landau
Chair,
1998 Visual Arts Jury
1991 Winner of the Cleveland Arts Prize for Literature
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