I did everything I could, oil and chalkboard pint on panel, 35" x 29", 2008

Molly Rausch is an artist of the everyday. She paints mundane thingsโ€”chairs, radios, step ladders, garage-door openersโ€”elevating their status above their normal station in the hierarchy of objects. A lampโ€™s craning neck takes on the tristesse following a break-up. A bathtub evokes pleasurable solitude, misunderstood by others as loneliness.

Rasuchโ€™s paintings are often more about whatโ€™s left out than whatโ€™s included, whether itโ€™s the absence of figures or the enigmatic snippets of text that reference larger conversations. Her paintings at once express concerns about the limits of communicationโ€”your thoughts on an empty chalkboard, Dr. Freud?โ€”as well as the inability to effectively use the tools available to relate to others. The personal gravity of Rauschโ€™s work prevents it from escaping the orbit of its self-reference, while looking wistfully toward a genuine connection it might be incapable of.

A new, whimsical direction in Rauschโ€™s work is her altered typewriters, in which the keys are rearranged to encode a message. (Note the keys on Royal Lark on page 33.)
Recent paintings by Rausch are being exhibited as part of a group show at Carl Van Brunt Gallery in Beacon through January 5. www.vanbruntgallery.com.

MOLLY RAUSCH ON HER WORK

Subjects
I donโ€™t put figures in my paintings. I paint inanimate objects. Itโ€™s just worked that way over the last 15 years. If you go back through the chunks of work I do, I used to paint these tiny pieces, and theyโ€™d have figures, and they were interiors. The figure werenโ€™t the most evocative parts, though; they always looked flattened and dead to me. When I draw inanimate objects, they have more life to them than when I draw living things, which seem to look kind of killed. I moved from architectural interiors to landscapes to maps to these everyday objects. Iโ€™ve been on the everyday object kick for about five years now, just cataloging stuff thatโ€™s around me, things I grew up with, things I collect at yard sales or from places I visit. Iโ€™m a huge yard sailor. I collect a lot of junk. Iโ€™m attracted to old papers, office supplies, typewriters, chairs and lately, chalkboards. Yard sales can make the best art supply stores.

Text
All the quotes in my paintings are personal and self-referential. Theyโ€™re culled from my sketchbooks or what other people have said to me. Sometimes the quotes are connected between the person that said it and the place/object thatโ€™s depicted; sometimes theyโ€™re connected just by my gut feeling. Thereโ€™s a painting of a bathtub that says, โ€œJust because I donโ€™t say anything doesnโ€™t mean Iโ€™m quiet.โ€ The bathtub just seemed to suit the quote. The trick to those paintings was finding an image and some text that balanced each other and made sense, had equal weight, both content-wise and layout on the painting-wise.

Chalkboards
I included text in my paintings for a while. I also had pairs of paintings without text, working off this idea that there was a conversation going on between them. Now that Iโ€™m losing the text again, itโ€™s as if the chalkboard pieces are really just inviting the viewer to actually write on them. I donโ€™t put chalk on them in a gallery because I donโ€™t want it to turn into a big mess, but itโ€™s a chalkboard, and thatโ€™s what itโ€™s there forโ€”youโ€™re supposed to write on it. People, if they buy one of these [chalkboard paintings], are not going to use it for their grocery listโ€”but they could. By not having text on the paintings, and by painting on a chalkboard, Iโ€™m not really talking with the viewer anymore, Iโ€™m providing them with this tool to talk back to me, even though I know theyโ€™re not going to use it because they think itโ€™s a painting.

Chairs
I have thing for chairs. I have a problem with chairs. I have too many chairs. Chairs are very personal. They definitely have different personalities. For me, Iโ€™m interested in the implied presence of a person, or the just-left absence of a person. Chairs are stand-ins for people in my paintings. Theyโ€™re also just beautiful.

Sarcasm Key
The typewriter project started with a joke. I was trying to e-mail somebody, and I said, โ€œI canโ€™t find the Sarcasm Key on this computer.โ€ So I wanted to make a typewriter with a Sarcasm Key. The typewriter will be fully functional, but instead of having a Shift Key itโ€™ll have a Sarcasm Key.

Obsolescence
Chalkboards and typewriters are weird, childish, school-type things that nobody uses anymore. Most of what I depict are obsolete things that no one uses anymore. Iโ€™m not drawing iMacs.

Revision
The only times Iโ€™ve edited or revised my work after Iโ€™ve finished it has been with a table saw. Sometimes an aspect of a painting will really bug me and Iโ€™ll have to trim three inches down one side. Iโ€™ve done that on several occasions. Itโ€™s an advantage of plywoodโ€”you canโ€™t do that with canvas.

Chunks
My strategy is to play around until and I hit something and then Iโ€™m like, โ€œOh, I want to make 20 more like that.โ€ I work in chunks. I do that until eventually I get to that point where it feels very stagnant and I start to know Iโ€™m done. When Iโ€™m in the middle of a body of work, in can sometimes feel like, well, work. But then it circles back around. Thereโ€™s usually the freshness and the urgency at the very beginningโ€”Iโ€™m like boom, boom, boomโ€”I get all these ideas and it just takes a while to get through them all. I usually have a list, which Iโ€™ll constantly go through and edit and change as I work on drawings. But I usually have a set in mind. Then I say to myself, โ€œAlright, this is going to be the last one.โ€ And then sometimes it opens me up in some way and Iโ€™ll think, โ€œOh, Iโ€™ll do just one more.โ€ That painting can end of being a really, really good one. Generally the less that you try, the better it is.

I did everything I could, oil and chalkboard pint on panel, 35″ x 29″, 2008
Penthouse, oil on plywood, 60″ x 48″, 2007

Brian is the editorial director for the Chronogram Media family of publications. He lives in Kingston with his partner Lee Anne and the rapscallion mutt Clancy.

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