Taken from the Broward New Times
Written by Michael Mills, Art Critic.
What sets Saba apart is its emphasis on French artists, as in artists born
in France as well as artists who are from elsewhere but choose to live and
work in France. The owner and curator, Priscilla Krammer, is French, and on
the day I stopped by, her parents, a sister, and perhaps another relative or
two also turned up and made themselves useful by adjusting lights and taking
on miscellaneous other tasks. (Krammer says that Saba is Hebrew for
grandfather, although she named the gallery after her father.)
Given the limited space, Krammer and her gracious, knowledgeable assistants
have filled the gallery with an amazing quantity (and variety) of art, and
yet the place doesn't feel crowded or cluttered. Each work is presented with
an accompanying text panel that specifies title, artist, dimensions, and
price, along with a bit of information about the artist and a little PR
fluff about his or her style (dates and media, unfortunately, are missing).
This may seem like a small thing, but considering how many galleries can't
be bothered with such basics, it's a pleasant surprise.
As for the art itself, well, it's a mixed bag, but isn't that almost always
the case with a commercial gallery? There's quite a lot of what loosely
qualifies as post-abstract expressionism - big, colorful canvases that
manage to be stimulating without being too threatening. In the case of the
Paris-based Jean Soyer, who gives his paintings odd numerical titles like
140/97 05 03 16 and 162/114 05 03 10, this translates to broad, dramatic
swaths of pigment applied atop a background of a highly contrasting color.
The pieces included here by Etienne Courcelle, who lives and works on a boat
on the Seine in Paris - is that a charmed life or what? - are less
consistent. In something like Lineament, at about 51 by 64 inches, he
creates a soothing blue space punctuated with red squares and multicolored
stripes on a mottled surface that feels just right. Some of his other works
come across as simply decorative, something to flesh out a room's look.
Among the handful of pieces by Maurice Arama, the standout is an abstract
study in cool blues called Le Deuxieme Jour, which looks as if sand and tiny
pebbles have been worked into the pigment for texture. Arama was born in
Morocco in 1934 but has been based in Paris since the '60s, and the text
panel identifies him as an expert on Delacroix, although you'd never guess
that from his own work.
There was only one work by Jehan Legac on view when I visited, but it was
seductive enough to make me long to see more. Legac got his start as a
photographer working for the son of legendary French President Charles de
Gaulle, and his Don't Look Back looks like a drastically manipulated photo
enlargement. The image is dominated by an interlocking set of sensuous,
curvaceous forms on the right that suggest a human figure without actually
portraying one, and the sickly greenish yellows are surprisingly warm, just
as the blocky blue form in the lower left corner provides an unexpected
jolt.
In the realm of the figurative, there are several variations on a theme by
Ran Gazit, a 54-year-old Israeli who has lived and worked in Paris for the
past three decades. That theme is the tango, which he captures in blurry
grandeur on canvases large and small. There's also an unassuming but lovely
little landscape, Coin de Paris sous la neige, by Russian immigrant Vladimir
Naiditch (1903-80), that hovers on the border between realism and
impressionism.
Commercial galleries often seem to approach sculpture as a sort of necessary
evil and dot their display spaces with a lot of ghastly stuff. Saba, by
contrast, presents some fine work. Myriam Franck's small bronze pieces, for
instance, are nicely restrained studies in contrast, with gleaming, highly
polished surfaces playing off rougher sections. And Nancy Gail Weissberg, a
France-based expatriate from Los Angeles, plays tricks on our eyes with
ceramics that mimic other materials. Her Tete avec dessins geometriques, for
instance, is a big human head that looks amazingly like wood and includes
realistic features disrupted by inorganic elements.
Although there's nothing brazenly political at Saba, Krammer doesn't shy
away from showcasing artists whose ethnicity informs their art. An
outstanding example is Alain Kleinmann, who was born in Paris in 1953 to
parents who had survived the Holocaust. His works here are typically
rendered in hazy metallic tones, each featuring a central image - say, a
Jerusalem skyline - surrounded by multiple lines of Hebrew text. (Saba gets
more explicitly political on August 10, when it opens its "Judaica" show
with a fundraiser for the Association for the Wellbeing of Israel's
Soldiers.)
I've saved the best for last: Homo Mediaticus, a remarkable installation by
Roberto Moreno, a Venezuelan-born artist who was formerly a cameraman for
network television. Saba has a handful of paintings by Moreno, and a gallery
assistant told me he paints as a respite from his installation work, which
is understandable - Homo Mediaticus is nothing if not ambitious and clearly
labor-intensive.
The piece takes up about 25 to 30 square feet of floor space and sits on a
white tarp streaked with black paint, cordoned off by white nylon rope
strung between makeshift white stanchions. (The overall color scheme is
basic black and white.) Four clusters of objects dominate the space: a white
female mannequin sitting on a white chair; a bundled stack of newspapers
streaked with paint; a round basket painted black, stenciled with the word
RECYCLE and filled with discarded electrical components and fragments of
plaster body parts; and a large cube collaged with newspaper and smeared
with paint, sprouting ten featureless white plaster heads, one with a
transparent cranium revealing circuitry.
Wait, there's more. Two metal hoses issue from the cube, one connecting to
the mannequin, the other linking to the RECYCLE basket. And the whole
conglomeration is animated by a pair of screens, both broadcasting the same
seemingly random segments of black-and-white video. The larger screen is set
within the side of the cube facing the seated figure; the smaller one is
mounted in the middle of the mannequin's back.
Linger behind the mannequin for a few moments, so that both screens are in
your line of sight, and you'll suddenly see yourself - there's a tiny camera
concealed among the heads atop the cube, and from time to time, the
prerecorded video footage is interrupted by live shots from this little
camera, seamlessly integrated into images of, say, Elian Gonzalez being
rescued or fighter jets taking flight.
Such extreme art is not to everyone's taste, I realize. But Moreno's
installation is easily one of the most adventurous works I've ever seen in a
gallery this side of Miami. Saba has plenty of other quality work to
recommend it, but this piece alone makes it worth a visit.