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The
paintings by Kim Schuessler are joyously kooky. Figures that recall
the flapper-era images by Al Held sport about in the sunshine and
under umbrellas , strolling and dancing with abandon. Silly little
cars stare at the viewer like jelly beans with eyes, and furniture
assumes comfortable personalities. To the casual eyes, these works
have a child-like quality that might tempt those with really gifted
children to strip their refrigerators and hang offspring art throughout
the house. Of course, SchuesslerŐs paintings are more than childish
patterns. Along with sunny colors and coltish anatomical exaggerations,
she employs scribbled words as information and as non-verbal decorative
elements. Her work offers the delectable quality of a dessert concoction.
James R. Nelson
, The Birmingham News
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Recent
Works by Kim Schuessler. Monty Stabler Galleries. Through Oct. 30
Kim
Schuessler has developed a whimsical style that can be called kooky
in the Al Held cartoon manner, a way of painting charming and slightly
ditzy figures. One can sense the sap rising from the firmly rooted
feet of her figures, their tree trunk-like figures often topped
by umbrellas. The very awkwardness of these youthful doll-like figures
suggests spring, the discovery of love and the innocent, lubberly
testing of youthful passion. While there are several works that
depict row houses and sets of chairs, the figure paintings dominate
this witty and guileless excursion into the utterly cute.
James R. Nelson
, The Birmingham News , October 20, 2002
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