Art Dose Vol. 38 | Derrick Buisch: The knowable and Unknowable

Derrick Buisch: The Knowable and Unknowable

Article by Linda Marcus Published in Art Dose Vol. 38 by Frank Juárez

“Drawing is a way of seeing into your own nature.”- Richard Serra

Derrick Buisch uses vibrating colors, lines, and shapes to create a kind of energy, anxiousness, and ambiguity that leaves the viewer  wanting more. It’s a peak into Buisch’s nature as an artist. The University of Wisconsin-Madison painting professor’s work is deeply steeped in popular culture, graphic design, and the never-ending dialect between the knowable and unknowable.

Buisch is hesitant to call himself an abstract painter. He says he’s been highly influenced by such greats as Gerhardt Richter, Forrest Best, and Mike Kelley. What makes Buisch’s work engaging is his use of the pedestrian, the common, or every day. It’s visible in his ongoing use of the smiley face. It’s been an interest for him for the last 30 years. He says he’s always trying to reinvent it. “I’m interested in trying to define language or vocabulary or iconography that would resonate, kind of beyond itself,” says Buisch. “A smiley face is something you can make in a matter of seconds. Once you have seen it, you understand what it is. It’s like the plus symbol or Ampersand or the @ symbol. Once you understand it it’s almost like a reflex.” Buisch also paints snakes or flying saucers for the same reason. Both represent something most of us have seen or know about, but they are also something which represents mystery and uncertainty. ” It’s evidence of mystery, you don’t know what it is, there’s a lot of hypotheses about what it could be. There are fuzzy pictures of them. they are deeply connecting but you don’t fully understand.”

A recent Zoom tour of Buisch’s studio is a feast for the eyes, a sensorial experience. Buisch says, ” I want my paintings to be the most beautiful, delicious thing you put in your mouth, and it would be like this rush of sugar completely high caloric, best cake you have ever tasted, like a flavor rush. I want my paintings to have that immediate flavor rush. it’s a trigger pleasure. The bold, eye-catching colors and forms are things we think we know, but we quickly realize it’s something quite different we’re encountering, something we don’t fully understand but are intrigued by.

Buisch democratizes imagination and gives the viewer permission to play. He purposely hangs his paintings and drawings together to create a kind of grouping, ecosystem, and an energy field. He says, “Hopefully, part of the work is that I want it to just jump off the wall. I refer to it as headache colors, two complimentary colors are vibrating against each other.” It’s those kinds of ideas that drive a kind of alchemical way of working for Buisch, “I like a painting that can be irreverent and formal and sassy and entertaining. I’m interested in what’s deeply familiar but still mysterious and a sensation that gets me closer to what I want to do. It’s a style of making which engages and slows the viewer down”, according to Buisch.

Growing up in the late ’70s and ‘80s in Silver Spring, Maryland, Buisch was highly influenced by all around him, including his comic book collection, record collection, and all the graphic design around him. He says he’s always ” unlocking “things” he’s absorbed throughout his life, and it comes out in his drawings and paintings in notebooks and repurposed ledgers. Each one is full of watercolor, acrylic, and pen drawings of all different gestures and shapes. Each collection is a study or log.  Buisch says it’s distilled chaos.” A lot of this I’m thinking about and pulling it in and then at some point there’s a place you pull it out”. 

Luckily, there’s a lot for viewers to enjoy. Buisch’s way of thinking and his nature are evident in his gestures, shapes, and doodles. He organizes it all and presents it in such a way it changes the viewer for the better. 

see the full artcile with images here

Derrick Buisch featured in Shepherd Express article

*Click HERE to read article on Shepherd Express website

Derrick Buisch’s ‘Remarks in Color’ at Tory Folliard

BY SHANE MCADAMS - MAY 24, 2023

I finally made it in to see a show of paintings by Derrick Buisch at Tory Folliard this week (up through May 27) and it caught me off guard a little. Not because his exhibition “Remarks in Color” is mind-bendingly beyond what I expected from him; but rather because it was exactly what I expected, in just the right way, like seeing an old friend. 

I’ve known Buisch’s work for a long time, and he’s one of the few artists I can honestly say gets me incrementally closer to possessing a complete understanding of his point-of-view with each painting I see. Each piece builds not on the last, but towards an entire perspective. Like how a conversation with someone evolves slowly over time, revealing detail after detail about the underlying character of the person across from you. It doesn’t matter where it goes, because it’s all revealing an indirect portrait of an entire multi-dimensional human personality. This show didn’t just do that, it revealed the nature “that” in general. 

When one first encounters Buisch’s pared down graphic forms, often set against a monochromatic background, they can’t be blamed for wondering what the storyline is. His works are almost always spare and economical. Bluespikesspring for instance isn’t going to blow your mind with an epic yarn, but it’ll give you plenty of threads to follow through his work. The 24 x 24-inch spiky, powder-blue form against a tangerine background tells you just a few things about what he’s on about. But you only learn this as you keep on rapping with it. Color Cat Chart #4 offers another enclosed shape of a thick impasto line. One starts to infer that the subjects are meant to live in an intentional purgatory between shape and figure, between abstract and concrete, and between graphics and rendered form. 

Primary Colors

His use of color and pattern ply similarly ambiguous territory. In the case of Bluespikesspring and Color Cat Chart #4, each employs an almost academically referential scheme. The former a complementary, optical tension, and the latter a primary color chart. As for pattern and surface, the former uses a from-the-tube-impasto line on a flat field and the latter a messy-but-regular benday pattern on a clean unmodulated background. 

The conversation continues to move. Creature Weather Head, another marginal lifeform, lies on a bed of the dense, matte primary-red that sent me back to the tangerine background in Bluespikesspring, and made me reconsider its nature. Like I might’ve a remark in a good verbal exchange, I recalled something in the past and folded it back into the moment. It’s a dynamic, reciprocal, and always unfolding story. And this is true of Buisch’s work beyond the canvas, from his record collection, to the ‘zines he’s produced, to the ephemera he collects, to the photographic observations about improbable color moments he takes. Not everyone is privy to this comprehensive bag of things, but it’s not important because the paintings get there in good time. 

Buisch’s work made me think about how every artist I know has an at-the-ready way of addressing gimmicky art contrivances; the kind fathers-in-law and first year art students trot out as “really amazing!!!” I for instance tell my students that most artists realize that the opportunity to make a photorealistic portrait of Marilyn Monroe out of Gummi Bears is always available, it’s just not taken. A friend once told me he simply calls such things “Mad Libs Art.” It’s probably the same with any creative pursuit. I’m sure Max Richter or Wynton Marsalis both know that a chestnut like “California Gurls” by Katy Perry is always out there, but they choose to go in another direction, in pursuit of open waters and their own unique intercourse with the world. I reminded myself as I left Tory Folliard and Derrick Buisch’s latest paintings that it’s the journey, not the destination, the conversation not the consummation.

Derrick Buisch and Laurie Hogin Featured in Rockford Art Museum exhibition, "Sonic Disruptions"

*To read Press Release on the Rockford Art Museum website, please click HERE.

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FEB 7–MAY 25, 2020 | ROCKFORD ART MUSEUMSPONSORED BY SMITH CHARITABLE FOUNDATION, COMMUNITY FOUNDATION OF NORTHERN ILLINOIS + ROCKFORD AREA ARTS COUNCIL

This 15-week major exhibition features Derrick Buisch and Laurie Hogin who use color, imagery, narrative, and symbols to stimulate our senses and challenge our perceptions. Vibrating lines morph into playful symbols of pop culture and brilliant color combinations provide jolts of electric energy in paintings. Meant to be visually engaging and potentially unnerving, Buisch combines evocative imagery with moments of uneasy hilarity. Hogin creates beautiful yet bizarre apocalyptic landscapes and allegorical animal portraits saturated in brilliant color and imbued with elaborate narratives reflecting pop culture and the human experience. Deeply concerned by the social and political issues in our contemporary culture, her dazzling yet disturbing narrative allegories portray the disastrous effects of drug abuse, altered food sources, over-consumerism and misguided political and economic forces.

Also featured in this dynamic exhibition is a custom-designed playlist and reading list of the artists’ favorite music and books, as well as related programming.

Derrick Buisch received his BFA from the Maryland Institute College of Art in Baltimore, and his MFA from the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis. A professor at the University of Wisconsin–Madison since 1997, he has exhibited regionally and nationally. Buisch is represented in several public and private collections, including Rockford Art Museum.

Laurie Hogin received her BFA from Cornell University in Ithaca, New York and her MFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Now Associate Director and Director of Graduate Studies at the School of Art and Design at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, she has exhibited across the country and around the world. Laurie Hogin is represented in numerous public and private collections, including the Cedar Rapids Museum of Art, Iowa; Krannert Art Museum, Champaign, Illinois; Brauer Museum of Art, Valparaiso, Indiana; Sheldon Memorial Art Gallery, University of Nebraska, Lincoln; John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation; and Rockford Art Museum.