Elmer Bischoff. Transcending Form
![painting of two woman figures standing facing each other](../../img/figures/bischoff/bischoff3a.jpg?nf_resize=fit&w=1000)
Elmer Bischoff rendered his figurative paintings from memory rather than painting directly from models. Clusters of gestrual brushwork dissolve forms without defined edges, creating atmospheric—almost dreamlike—compositions. As Bischoff described: “Light and color were paramount as expressive content and also as organizational elements. . . . I guess this could represent some kind of rebellion against my early schooling where ‘organization’ of a painting was always seen as an organization of contours, a continuity and relatedness of edges.”1 Light and color wash over his paintings like a kind of gauzy haze, so as to evoke emotion rather than the formal nature of his subject or, as art critic Donald Kuspit wrote, “dissolv[ing] tangible facts into intangibles of feeling.”2