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Adam Blaustein Rejto
Adam Blaustein Rejto

The contradictoriness of Adam Blaustein Rejto’s pandemic paintings, daubed from handmade oil and egg tempera on petite wood panels, takes its time to emerge. They’re abstract; they’re representational. They’re lyrical and lovely; they’re explosive and fragmentary. The hues are sweet and light; they’re heavy and muddy. They’re panoramic; they’re molecular. They’re tender; they’re careless. Those paradoxical descriptors apply to each of Blaustein Rejto’s recent pictures, which also look like the offspring of a relationship between Kandinsky, Chagall, and a sweatshirt my mother wore in the 1980s. Dream-like modernism crossed with personal memory, the viewer’s or the artist’s, seems an adequate framework for it all, and squares well enough with titles like “When I remember you” and “Looking through Rio’s binoculars inside the Widow Jane’s Cave.”

—Lori Waxman 2020-12-04 11:00 AM