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The Night’s Familiar but Uneasy Mysteries

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SPECIAL TO THE TIMES

There’s something inexplicably entrancing about “Take Back the Night,” David Deany’s gallery-subsuming installation at Diannepruess Gallery. Though composed of only a few idiosyncratic individual elements, it evokes a sense of humble mystery akin to that of one’s childhood backyard at night: a familiar place made unfamiliar by a veil of darkness. It feels cozy but uncanny, safe but uneasy.

The unifying element in the installation is a synthetic tone of midnight blue. The gallery’s windows are covered with blue spray paint, and blue light seeps through the planks of a rough, splintery wood floor that is built about a foot above the gallery’s cement floor. Two large paintings--one that conveys a horizontal wave pattern meant to suggest running water, another that depicts a large, silhouetted tree--stew in similar shades.

A large, steaming tub of fresh tar and a kitschy but daunting painting of an owl pose an earthy contrast to the cold atmosphere of blue. A spattering of small, beige, unevenly ovular forms are set into the wall above the owl and are lighted from within like an otherworldly hybrid of stone and star.

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This dichotomy between blue and beige, sky and earth is loose and perhaps even unconscious. But it anchors the space into a rich, organic state of tension. No single element of the installation seems calculated or particularly potent in itself--indeed, they’re all disarmingly amateurish--but their casual cooperation spins this tension into an alluring web.

It is a refreshingly sloppy, intelligently ambiguous and wonderfully unpretentious project, all in all. One is tempted to pitch a tent alongside its lava-like pool just to see what spirits might emerge at the stroke of midnight.

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Diannepruess Gallery, 945 Chung King Road, Chinatown, (213) 687-8226, through Feb. 9. Closed Sunday through Tuesday.

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