Thursday, December 10, 2009

Greely Myatt - David Lusk Gallery and Various Other Memphis Locations

by Carol Knowles

(note: an edited version of this review appears in the December 2009 ARTnews.  This is the full copy courtesy of Ms. Knowles.)

Greely Myatt, a Mississippi-born, post-modern sculptor and University of Memphis professor makes art out of cast-off materials that he laces together with sly humor and down-home wisdom. In one of his signature installations, “A Brief History of Sculpture,” real soap bubbles spill over the top and down the sides of a worn wooden plinth as Myatt spoofs his own title, takes sculpture off its pedestal, and suggests that art, rather than being concise or categorical, is effervescent and ever-changing.


In September nine exhibitions, collectively titled “Greely Myatt: and Exactly Twenty Years,” featured Myatt’s most memorable works in venues as varied as Memphis Brooks Museum of Art, The Art Museum of the University of Memphis, Memphis City Hall, P & H CafĂ©, and David Lusk, the gallery that gives Memphians a good dose of Myatt’s wit and wisdom every couple of years. 


The partially-opened zipper embedded in an otherwise pristine-white wall at David Lusk suggested a still deeper glimpse into the structure of art which Myatt achieved with a body of recent work that included four large Southern-style quilts made out of salvaged street signs, two installations carved from wood and loaded with innuendo, and twelve lighted marquees constructed out of reclaimed plastic, wood and metal.




Unlike Jenny Holzer’s sardonic takes on “truisms” spotlighted with pulsing LED’s, Myatt’s marquees embodied the wonder and curiosity of a child at play. Catch-phrases that had also served as titles of previous shows -- “Not in This House,” “Not Sold in Stores,” “A Fool w/ an Idea or Two” – were softly backlit by florescent bulbs and spelled with letters that came in every size, shape, degree of transparency and color of the rainbow.


Part child, part son-of-the-South, part Buddha -- Myatt is drawn to paradoxes that challenge and enlarge our perceptions. “Like a Lighthouse,” a beam of hardwood carved into a body-less and freestanding pair of trousers, mounted at the center of a large table, struck this viewer as a wry, viscerally compelling sexual icon that also served as poignant metaphor for the emptiness and isolation we sometimes feel in spite of the constant stimuli in our wired-up, plugged-in and cyber-spaced world.

Monday, December 07, 2009

Robert Parker: New Works

The Taos Inn, December 5th - April 3rd


“These new compositions are a suc­cessful departure from Parker’s previ­ous work, and consort oddly with the more recognizable crisp and linear pragmatism of his distinctly modernist abstractions,” says Jina Brenneman, curator at the Harwood Museum of Art.  "The 'Parallel Realities series',” she says, is presented “as blurs of color, the shapes quirky and mysterious; these works - the ‘idea’ of an interior or a landscape - are barely restrained from being an almost per­versely visceral and voyeuristic viewing experience."

Brenneman continues, "The additional drawings in the Taos Inn Library can be seen as a testament to the artist's predilection for clarity and calm as each cozy sketch, marked with great delicacy, exhibits a deep recognition of beauty and a studious attempt to gain understanding of the natural landscape."

Tuesday, November 03, 2009

Leya Evelyn - There Is No Hidden Meaning Here

Nov. 6 - Nov. 27, Secord Gallery, Halifax, Nova Scotia

So what is it about Taos that I have a hard time finding great painters and shows like this one and the one below?  There are times when I regret not keeping Sagefarm Fine Art open.  But then Marti at J Fine Art reminds me of the things I don't miss about owning a gallery and I realize I'm fine just painting and letting her (and thankfully a few other gallerists) do the hard work.


Anyway.  Leya Evelyn's paintings are chock full of passion for form and color.  The swing back and forth between thoughtful composition and wild abandon is very compelling.  She clearly gives a lot of attention and effort into the application of paint and other materials on the canvas and on top of other paint and yet the pieces don't come off as overly studied, perhaps due to the scrumbling and the fast stroked oil stick on the eventual surface.

This one is 'Do You Have Another Idea? No. 1', 42" square, mixed media and collage on canvas

Dave Hickey informs us that lacking specific and obvious reasons we like certain paintings, we make them up.  Evelyn's title for this exhibit (as well as it being the title of a short series of a few of her paintings) would want the viewer to believe that her work is all about design and no deep thoughts.  Keeping Hickey's comment in mind, I still have an emotional response to Evelyn's work and the magic of  her palate.  Her work makes me believe there is the chance of hope and peace and new possibilites ahead without forgeting the history we've lived in order to get to this place.  More can be seen here:

http://www.secordgallery.com/gallery/view_album.php?set_albumName=album07

Of course, with abstract art, the viewer brings his or her baggage to the table.  And so, that's mine.  I'm interested if you select and few readers feel the same about Evelyn's paintings?  Go see art and make up your own mind.

------------

Leya Evelyn responds: “The title means both stop thinking and also, it’s a little the opposite: there’s lots of meaning, but only if you stop thinking.”  She continues, "Because of the many layers of collage, words, drawing and paint in my paintings, there is, naturally, hidden aspects–meanings, it you care to put it that way. Interpretation is very personal. What you see is, usually, relative to your experience. What I want is for the painting to be able to transport the viewer beyond that relative knowledge, the everyday experience, to discover what is without reference. Forget words and meaning: just experience what you see."







Monday, November 02, 2009

Elizabeth Neel at Monica De Cardenas Galleria (Milan)

Love the frenetic application of the oil paint and surprising combinations of colors.  Neel pulls and pushes at the edge of representation in this show and in most of her paintings in a way that never steps over the line into annoying.  By abstracting from the subject's form and shape, her paintings observe the emotional and psychic energy around the object.

And isn't it nice to have an abstract artist that appears to be generally happy?  She comes into her talent via grandma. 

Shown here is 'Raised Ranch', 2009, oil on canvas, 211x244 cm  More can be seen at
http://www.monicadecardenas.com/current.php?mz=m


Go see art and make up your own mind.

Monday, August 24, 2009

Four Painters

Taos Land Trust Benefit – Stables Gallery, August 21 – 23, 2009

By the time you very select and few readers read this, the opportunity to purchase some good art from local luminaries in the Taos art world and in turn, help the Taos Land Trust in their life-affirming quest to perpetually endow all of us citizens with nature’s art, will be gone. Too bad, too, as there was some great art on display in this modestly attended event over this past weekend. I went this morning (Sunday, August 23rd) and as of my visit, no red dots. Which is truly unfortunate. If you are a fan of this genre, these are some of the top painters around here and for such a good cause…well, humph.

Okay – first off, I didn’t see a clunker in the entire bunch. Not that I was enamored of every single piece of about forty or so, but the curator, Jan Mellor, persuaded the cream of local Taos regional painters to hang pieces. Ms. Mellor, as we all know, is Taos’s hardest working art displayer. Not that her gallery has the best art in town, but she works the hell out of it and that counts for something. It does, right? Right?

Anyway. I was struck in particular by four specific landscape painters and how their art starts with striking similarities and then through the force of their disparate personalities, diverts into painting styles and compositions that are worthy of comparison.

Let’s get the guessing out of the way. The four artists I want to talk about are: Alyce Frank, Inger Jirby, Mary Ann Warner, and Leigh Gusterson. Let me say this upfront, which may surprise some of you: I like all of these painters’ work.

As some of you Taos art fans know, Frank and Barbara Zaring painted side-by-side for a quarter century beginning in the 1970’s. Frank is beloved and for good reason and we’ll get to that. Inger Jirby, with her long lived gallery on LeDoux Street is also a local icon. I will venture to say that these two artists may not have the same fans. To which I will reply, too bad and take another look.

Each of these artists deliberately start a canvas by completely filling it with a solid color that later will peek through at otherwise unpainted spots and serves to unify the final painting with a palate theme of color that, appropriate to the technique, seems to emanates from within. This is something that Frank and Zaring staked successful careers on and almost always through those years, preparing their canvases with bright rose, reds, and pink oranges that added that bit of majesty and vibrant life to their dark purply black and grey mountains, lush green valleys and bright blue skies. Zaring went on to give painting classes and, in fact, Gusterson was, at one time, a participant.

Mary Ann Warner, 'On the Road to the Monestary', 16" square


What separates Leigh Gusterson and Mary Ann Warner from the scores of regional plein aire painters is their timing. Warner’s timing, which is likely illusory, relates to the compositional positioning of fauna in her paintings. The grazing cows are just so. The horses in the corral are posed so their legs are hit with a setting sun in just the right way. Of all four of the women examined here, Warner is by far the draughtswoman – just witness her signature. Her brushstrokes are keenly observational, straight and precise, thoughtfully executed and bring beautiful mellow contrasts of light and shadow into her work. She mixes her paints more muted than the other women, but sparks her pieces with bits of unexpected colors.




Leigh Gusterson, '5 in Couse Field', 24"x36"

Gusterson is next down the tight-to-loose paint handling scale. Her timing relates more to time of day. Her best works are those paintings that capture the sliver of glazing light that slides off the back of her ubiquitous horses at sunset. I am struck how over the years Gusterson has improved her eye for disarmingly simpler compositions allowing the long shadows of day’s end to tell her story. She has the paint handling skills but has churned out acres of very similar paintings. With this exhibit, it appears she is stretching her work beyond the canvases of which we are overly familiar and I like them very much.

Both Warner and Gusterson also use a painter’s technique to good advantage where they bring paint up just short of particular objects in the frame allowing bits of backpainted color to edge the object. Both clearly revere this place where we live. One feels, while observing their paintings, that any sudden movement by the viewer would interrupt the scene.

Inger Jirby, 'Sopyn's Peach Orchard'


Inger Jirby also backpaints her canvases frequently in a deep, dark pink and then builds up her pastoral scenes with thickly brushed oil. She dips her brush into more than one color at a time and allows the paint to mix in a thready way as she outlines the objects in her compositions perhaps unconsciously mimicking Van Gogh’s way of doing the very same. Jirby’s painting is the loosest among these four, but close observation by the viewer reveals that she is very careful and very intentional with her palate as she picks up the paint, although the end painting has a wonderfully casual final look. Not as studious about the play of light across her objects, Jirby instead chooses to bring exuberance to her work by deliberately avoiding the painterly techniques of Gusterson and Warner, resulting in fresh paintings full of movement and joy.

Alyce Frank, 'The Transparent Hondo River', oil on linen, 34" square


Alyce Frank is a brilliant painter. She does all of the technical things mentioned above and moreover, things of her own that I don’t begin to understand. And does them all without particularly drawing attention to these things as ‘technique’. And does them apparently without exuding any effort to do them. One way to appreciate her paintings is to get up close – within inches - to her paintings and look at how unbelievably and perfectly simple the placement of pigment is on the surface. And then take about seven long steps backward and see how that sublime effort completely disappears. At a distance, we find ourselves delightfully relieved of the detail and instead consumed with pleasure in the play of light over her running water or over her mountains full of grace or her Alaskan expanses of ice or almost anything she paints. Frank is masterful about disguising her draughting via a disarming ‘folk’ look. Whether this signature style was developed intentionally over her career or not is irrelevant. And that’s the point with Frank. Her genius is spectacularly revealed through her fearless and uncompromised ability to paint. She just paints like the way some people just are able to sing. She doesn’t paint as though she’s having to think about it. She paints as though it is as natural as breathing.

So, go see art and make up your own mind.

Saturday, August 01, 2009

East Meets West

Stables Gallery, Taos, NM July 31 - August 3, 2009

One thing led to another and this collection of artists from Raton, NM and Taos, NM ended up putting on a group show at the Stables. As someone near to me remarked Thursday, "My uncle has a barn, let's put on a show!" But 'East Meets West'? Seriously? You really want to call it that?

Anyway - let's put that minor quibble aside, shall we, and see what we have here.

Pots with bones integrated as though buttoning up the clay. Kinda interesting. Pardon my very ingracious slight for not noting the artist. A departure from unadorned vessels that made me reflect on us humans and our many millenium of clayworking. In this case, our bones being literally part of the effort.

Greg Benge exhibits seven digitally enlarged and ink jet (boldly righteous of him not to call it 'giclee') reproduced Polaroid transfer prints. This technique, which will be obsolete once all artists' stock of Polaroid film runs out, adds a layer of grit and a dirty tone to the pieces. It is as though the viewer came upon them in one of those empty, windowless houses you speed by on the interstate and wonder about the people that used to live there. While it is debatable if this enhancement is appropriate for all of the imagery Benge puts behind it, it is particularly effective in a triptych of the White House.




Lenny Foster, 'Grandma Jean' 35mm color print

Lenny Foster revives several of his 'hand' photos for this show. I think I've seen most of these prints previously and recently, but that is not a complaint. His reverent tone, subject matter, cropping, coloration - well, I'm a fan. The text accompanying his work is perfect and underscores the gentleness of this fine artist.

The remainder of the exhibition is pedestrian and typical of the art one sees in group shows of this nature. Namely, technically fair but commonplace landscapes in various media.

Not much else of note with the exception of TAO's own Whitehawk and her 'mystical' art. Whitehawk unintentionally reveals her personal deep sadness and pain in this set of paintings. It must be genuinely horrible to be her and it shows. This is some of the worst art I've seen shown anywhere. It would be sublime if it turned out this body of work is thoughtfully ironic - and I so, so want that, but in the end, it's just truly bad. Her elemental composition, painful palate choices, childish (and not in a good way) application of paint and underpainted elements, and her wildly laughable accompanying text is agonizingly bad and stunningly stupifying. In fact, her art is so bad that it dominates the exhibit and takes one's attention away from the artists involved that do deserve thoughtful consideration.

So, go see art and make up your own mind.

Tuesday, May 05, 2009

Ghosts

In the early 1970's, give or take a few years, Dennis Hopper, Larry Bell, Kenneth Price, Ron Cooper, Ronald Davis, and Robert Dean Stockwell all made thier way to Taos, New Mexico and have, for the most part, remained there to live and work. In the beginning, it was mostly fun and chemicals in the shadow of the sixties, but gradually things settled down. Today, the most interesting attribute of these artists' transmigration from the West Coast is that it was part of a larger diaspora of American artists who left New York and Los Angeles during this period. Among the artists of my acquaintence, Bob Rauschenberg, Jim Rosenquist, and John Chamberlain all moved to Florida. Ellsworth Kelly moved to Spencertown, New York. Donald Judd moved to Marfa, Bruce Nauman to Galisteo, New Mexico, John McCracken to the Sangre de Cristos. Jim Turrell to southern Arizona, Ed Kienholz to Idaho, and Michael Heizer to the Nevada desert. Peter Saul moved to Paris and Don Van Vliet to Brussels. (Cy Twombly had escaped to Rome a decade earlier.) Billy Al Bengston sailed off to Hawaii. Craig Kauffman decamped to the Philippines. Ed Ruscha stayed in Los Angeles, but he built a house in the high Mohave and never moved to New York. Doug Wheeler and Terry Allen moved to Santa Fe, Luis Jimenez left Manhattan for Hondo, New Mexico.

This evacuation seed strange at the time, even catastrophic, but it was less exotic than it seemed. In the long view, it has become obvious that the European village culture established in downtown Manhattan, by New York School painters and their post painterly inheritors, was more the exception than the rule. American artists have always, in one sense or another, lived off the land: Thomas Cole, Frederic Church, and Martin Johnson Heade, on the Hudson River; George Caleb Bingham on the Mississippi; Remington Russell, Bierstadt on the Great Plains; Charles Birchfield, Thomas Hart Benton, Grant Wood, and John Steuart Curry in the Midwest; along with photographers like Ansel Adams, Walker Evans, Robert Frank, and William Eggleston who took quotidian distances of ordinary America as their palatte.

The Seventies Diaspora was different, however. All previous diaspora created distinct styles; their artists embraced distinct subject matter that could be read as a rejection of cosmopolitan life in favor of a more regional and place-centered culture milieu. The Seventies Diaspora, on the other hand, constituted a willful extension of cosmopolitan life into the far reaches of the American landscape. As such, it may be taken as marking the death of regionalism as one of art's religions. All of the artists who participated in the Seventies Diaspora - and all of the artists in Dennis Hopper's exhibition particularly - abandoned the metropolitan art-world with mature, cosmopolitan styles firmly in place. Unlike earlier artistic Quixotes in the American outback, none of the artists in Dennis Hopper's exhibition arrived in search of their own art, and unlike so much artwork in artistic colonies, their work never stoops to the celebration and rationalization of the local lifestyle; it never takes the tourist attractions of the region as a crutch.

For these artists, the lure of place was of an entirely different order, something more like an imperial colonization, a voluntary banishment from the tumult of the marketplace upon which they all continue to depend - and exile make possible by technological innovations in travel and communication. (I myself, tucked away in Las Vegas, have been the beneficiary of these same innovations.) As a result, I have participated in dinner table conversation in Taos, Santa Fe, Aspen, and Marfa that might just as easily have transpired in Rome, or in Roman North Africa during the heyday of the Empire. The ability of this frontier cosmopolitanism to sustain the life and work of artists in their voluntary retreats, however, also speaks to a stylistic peculiarity of American art in the nineteen sixties:

To grasp this peculiarity, you have to put yourself back in the swirl of the paradigm-shift, into a moment when the future seemed unlikely, the past seemed irrelevant, and American hegemony seemed assured. For those of us who lived through that moment, it felt like the beginning of the end, like The Last Movie in which anything might happen. It was presumed that nothing much came before and nothing much would come after. These conditions created a triumphant, a-historical Augustan art, designed for the moment and for eternity and nothing much between. So, today we look in vain for historical precedents or consequences. Pop and Minimalism seem to have blossomed up from the moment of their creation. Today, they continue as occasional practices that draw from their own resources. No news is required, no scene, no tumult of shifting styles. One looks in vain for historical commentary or artistic development in the work of Ken Price, or Donald Judd, or Ronald Davis, or Ellsworth Kelly, or Larry Bell. All of this work is self-creating; it is shaped by the occasion for which the work is made. Some artists have different styles but they are never 'early' or 'late' styles. Today, yesterday, tomorrow, it don't matter. In the history of Western Art, this work stands as a place set aside practiced today in places set aside.

The local causes of the Seventies Diaspora were obvious: the bloody tang of the Vietnam War, the negative charisma of Richard Nixon, the mauve dusk of sixties ebullience, the deteriorating conditions of life in New York and Los Angeles, the shift of patronage to the public sector, the escalating fashion for ephemeral and conceptual art, and the consequent devaluation of the artists for whome the physical world is indispensable. All these played a part, not for their actual consequence, but for what they meant. They meant that the idea of America a sthe city on the hill, as a forgiving, joyous, civilization was not to be. This peaceful kingdom, unfortunately, was the world for which all this work was made.

Even so, places might be found, where the work itself might continue to be created under chastened circumstances, and in my experience, Taos is one of the most beautiful and chastening places in the world. It has an encouraging history of harboring fugitive, killing priests, and assassinating governors. In the twentieth century, it has probably produced more serious art and literature than any other non-metropolitan area in the United States, and, throughout this century, Taos' virtues have remained more amenable to producers of art than to its consumers. It has resisted gentrification because, for all its beauty, Taos is not a cozy place. There is not much that architecture or landscaping can do to mitigate the daunting hegemony of the sky, the sweep of the flat, the looming scale of the distant mountains, and the perpetual inference of Lawrence's ghosts. Day in day out, year-round. Taos is hardly even a human place. It is the Top of the World, more the Wild West than the Southwest - more Tibet, in fact than Palm Springs. So if you want a beautiful place to work that bears with it the perpetual reminder that all you do will be broken, buried, blasted, and blown away - a place that makes you brave and serious, Taos is the place for you.

Dave Hickey
March 2009

Saturday, March 14, 2009

First Annual International Juried Group Exhibition

I got down south to the ungainly titled 'First Annual International Juried Group Exhibition' at the "Gallery on the Green" within the clubhouse of the Taos Country Club.

Grousing out of the way first: we all know Jan Mellor is the hardest working art dealer in the region, but do we have to see the Taos Gallery logo on every single label? The unrestrained self promotion is more than a little annoying. Second, "international" apparently is justified by one artist from Mexico and one artist from Canada. That, after a press release saying she got entries from around the globe...makes one wonder what was juried out...

As with any group show, there are high and low points with the art itself. The vast majority of the pieces are unimaginative landscapes. Which is not a surprise considering the choice of the judges.

On the low side, Maryland artist Anne Cherubim has made some poorly conceived pieces (pedestrian brushstrokes, unremarkable composition, distainful presentation) and then priced them at twice as much as she asks on various vanity web galleries, which is probably too much to begin with.

On the high side, there are a small handful of good pieces that make the long trip south (I almost thought I'd start seeing bbq joints) worthwhile.

One of my favorite homeboy artists, Chris St. John has two pieces that flaunt his bizarre characters and their emotional ghosts, front and center. His piece 'Antartic Keyhole' is in a palate not common for him with lovely frosty greens, pinks and midnite blues. St. John's scratching and scrumbling and bits of eroticism are a refreshing break from the sameness of the rest of this exhibit. Do not be convinced by his artist statement at the front desk - these are very personal pieces. At least I hope so.

'Dark Red Motion' by Brenda Hope Zappitell earns my 'artist to watch' award. Her piece near the entrance has a ton of motion and is priced to sell at $1,250. This piece has a lot of nice layering to the acrylic, but the composition begins to work through ideas and then semi-abandon them rather abruptly. Personally, I would have expanded the palate slightly to make a more interesting painting.

John Sorg has some insanely detailed scratchboard pieces done in native motif that are compelling from a technical standpoint. Each line, pick out, and fleck of removed material adds to the resonance of the obsession it must take to make this art. Sorg has several pieces in the show and it's interesting to walk between them to see what works and what doesn't.


A small painting around the corner from the entrance titled 'Fledglings Released' also caught my eye by Denver artist, Peggy McGivern. This is a nicely balanced piece with wildly confident brushing of oil on masonite. The protaganist's skyward expression of beatific joy as he (she?) is releasing birds to flight is sublime. Watery fleshtones contrast gorgeously with a blue/gray sky in a simple composition that is full of grace. McGivern's pieces have been used in a therapy program for troubled adolescents - and although I no longer qualify age-wise...well, anyway.

So, go see art and make up your own mind.