Jaisini starts his work from a captivating subject and consciously explores
his Gleitzeit style, focusing on the composition of entangled and enclosed
line. As a result of this double approach the subject of an artistic
elaboration takes the most unexpected outcomes and viewpoints. The images can
look like an outcome of the deliberate choice, a product of the artistic
revision. But could it be just as well a happy accident?
Blue Zone is an early period of Jaisini, where the graphical and color
denotation systems are used to flatten the picture's surface. The principle
of a dark line over a deep-colored ground looks less natural than a dark line
on a light ground. The topographical line of Blue Zone, which depicts Los
Angeles, has a full aesthetic balance by refusing an illusional depth, by
highlighting the two-dimensional sapphire surface of the painting. The
saturation of the color on the surface has a memorable effect of a cold
shadow. This can abstractly signify an isolated, hermetic zone of a
postindustrial society. The composition of full linear connection may as
well represent the idea of postmodern closure of horizons, a world without
an appropriate past or
imaginable future but interminable recurrent present.
Even though many personages of Blue Zone have their own color embodiment the
saturation of the blue in the background creates an atmospheric effect and
unites all the images by a cold short-wave cobalt light. No wonder that all
of the elements seem to be smaller and further than the actual flat
environment of the surface.
In Blue Zone, Jaisini introduces an abstract element of connected line that
unites and submits all of the images, planes, and details to this external
force of the secluded line. The work shifts from the representational to
abstract as a sort of a separate Einsteinium theory. Los Angeles has often
been referred as a postmodern city. It lacks a center, having a
disintegrating downtown area. It is a city of movement, something that is
perfectly symbolized by a parallelogramic topographic linear map of
Blue Zone painting. This picture represents the Angelinos who are quite at
home in the ordered game of the line. The Blue Zone residents are surrounded
by bare walls of spiritless modern architecture.
The Blue Zone's residents among others are: an oriental karate-man; a bald
"Babbit" with his "rabbit-heart" is being hypnotized be a cobra; a sitting
mature black man; a white-trashy looking prostitute; a Latin profile hidden
in spatial juxtaposition; a large
profile of an old weeping woman with a fish in her toothless mouth and
others.
The city of Los-Angeles can't be reduced to a single principle: not to the
motor car nor to the freeways, not the city's lack of hystory nor the dream
factory and Hollywood, nor the beach, not the smog, not the sun.
Wrapped around all these principles is the line of intersection of
interdependencies which have developed its own rules with its own claim to
represent the essence of postmodern city life. Blue Zone exemplifies the
whole line of social dysfunction of environment which is filled with
graffiti, vandalism, sexual trade and assault,
eroticism, family breakdown, and crime.
But still Blue Zone has the tranquillity of its glowing color which
encompasses hope even in the critical perspective of Jaisini's work.
It can be concluded that in a single space of this picture the several
artistic sites and attitudes are adjoined which are in themselves
incompatible: the movement and the philosophy of decay; the asymmetrical
trajectory of the 'postmodern' build environment and the infinitely
beautiful, unchanged blue depth. The fight of abstraction vs. representation.
All of which together denote the strategic double think and multipatterns of
our current life.