Janet Fish at DC MOORE Gallery
I met with Marsha Wooley yesterday to discuss art and the Paris Trip she leads on a yearly basis; I don’t have the one for 2007 yet and there’s much time to make a trip like that come together with time, money, family or all three.  Â
I ended up following Marsha uptown to see the opening of Janet Fish at the DC MOORE Gallery - which was crowded and attended by a couple of other well known artists including Alex Katz (who I did not speak to), and I decided not to talk with Janet Fish but I could have. Most of my questions were covered in the press release which is also on Artnet. If Janet Fish were someone I’d really wanted to talk to….I would have, yet despite knowing of her for 20 years (since my summer in Vermont during 1987) I did not feel a need to connect.
I found Janet Fish’s work even in quality and, more or less, predictable - still overall, pretty good (but not cutting edge).  I guess Janet Fish can get attention without being shocking and annoying (which is so common today in both painting and online media). People are so saturated with media messages – to just be yourself - to just paint, and make attractive paintings, takes a certain about of courage. Because selling out today, might be to attempt to be “cutting edge” and not being “yourself”.   So, whatever you think of Janet Fish, she stays within her range. Â
However, risk taking, I think, is what makes Art and Artists really interesting. If you don’t take some risks in your work, it’s easy to knock out work, and she had a lot of work at the opening, and I’m told, most of the show was sold out (I did not look at the price list, I’m sure Janet Fish’s paintings are expensive).
You can see a collection of what was in the show here but I took some photos too – and here’s what I liked.
This red vase was part of a painting I liked – the red symbolized something, and I could feel it. Is the red vase symbolic of something in the artist’s life that’s broken or is it just a vase she toppled so it would make more of an “effect” which the broken glass? I guess we’ll never know because I did not ask her.Â
But I’d like to think these arrangements work because they are also symbolic of something broken in the Artist’s life and she’s conveying that with the “red” vase – and the red carries because it’s fused with her feelings. And it’s not the red vase that’s broken, it’s the blue glass jar .. and who knows that that means?  Oh well, I can go on and on at this level, but as along as a painting poses a question – it’s interesting,
I think all of Janet Fish’s work has color – color tone – each painting has it’s own range – in some it’s reddish, and in other lilac while others could be Naples yellow.
So, while her work is predictable – there’ passion in it = and it’s probably among the best that you’ll see on 57th Street.Â
I could say more, but I’ll stop here – best to stop while your ahead. Right?
I still did not get fully down what the next step for the Paris trip – but I hope I got the ball rolling – would have liked to have a brochure but ended bumping into Marsha Wooley as she was leaving her gallery here, and she left the brochures at the gallery. Maybe I got enough information as it was.


