
Decoding the Symbology of
Janet Sobel
by Gary Snyder
Decoding the Symbology of
Janet Sobel
by Gary Snyder
Though Vivian Springford’s diaphanous color washes are often misidentified with the dominant aesthetics of the American Color Field movement of the 1960s, these works are at once more expansive and more traditional than their temporal counterparts, as they address the heavens as their subject.
Abstract Expressionism, into which Springford’s work is often grouped, had much more human concerns, however. Its innovation lay in the limits of the body, the canvas an “arena” in which it could perform, wielding a paintbrush. But Springford’s artistic performance has a higher ambition: to transcend her body, rather than to embrace the thrust of its movement. “Painting is my attempt to identify with the universal whole,” she revealed in a press release for a 1979 exhibition of her work [1], admitting to an ideal perhaps more in line with the Romantics than with the action painters.
Springford at her 25th street studio. c.1962
Cover image. Cosmos Series, ca. 1970. Collection Vivian Springford Archive.
“Painting is my attempt to identify with the universal whole. I want to find my own small plot or pattern of energy that will express the inner me in terms of rhythmic movement and color.”
-Vivian Springford
These words of cosmic connection are a philosophical rhyme with the words of Carl Sagan, whose books stood on her library’s shelves: “We are made of star stuff,” the astronomer wrote, “We are a way for the universe to know itself.”
To our earth-bound selves, the stars are no more than abstractions, randomness on which we can heap our legends and our myths, familiar shapes––a lion, a bear, a mythical hunter––we can only make out if we squint. But for Vivian Springford, they were not a vehicle for meaning, but her muse and subject, something for her to identify with, the way a portrait painter might her sitter.
Springford understood material as essential to the task she set out for herself and eschewed the trend of her time to paint canvases on a scale bigger than the body, an especially pointed choice given the magnitude of her chosen subject. Instead she used Archers paper, which she knew to absorb color in ways canvas could not. Her dedication to paper was a shrewd decision to play to the substrate’s strengths and reveals the artist’s keen attention to material. After all, if you are to paint the heavens, you cannot be sentimental about arbitrary earthly values.
This material was key to Springford’s Expansionist series, which references the ever expanding universe. We can almost see this movement as Springford’s colors seem to seep outward, drawn out by the paper’s absorbent pulp. For these works, she turned her eye to images she would have found in her copies of Burnham’s Celestial Handbook [3], which visually illustrated the “universe beyond the solar system.” Though Springford left many of these works untitled–– perhaps to preserve some of their mystery––what initially look like abstractions to the untrained eye can be identifiable as specific formations within the known universe.
Make it stand out
Untitled Nebula painting from the Expansionist Series, ca.1976. Collection Vivian Springford Archive.