Tangible Transience
By Tom Wachunas
“…I like these
pieces to have their own mystery, an unknown quality that makes them familiar,
perhaps, not recognized. Whether seen as individuals or part of a group, a
system, I think of these pieces as part of a larger environment.” - Beth Lindenberger –
“…My central theme
considers science as a neutral or neutralizing structure; a kind of blank
metaphor which allows me to let things be in the work…” - Jack McWhorter -
EXHIBITION: Gathering Signals, work by Jack
McWhorter and Beth Lindenberger, at The Little Art Gallery, 185 N. Main St.,
North Canton. (330) 499 – 4712, Ext. 312, THROUGH SEPTEMBER 23.
Throughout at
least the past several years, a typical format for mounting two-person shows at
The Little Art Gallery has been to join an artist who works in two dimensions
with one who is a 3D “craft” artist, usually in either jewelry or ceramics. In
such shows, while there has often been a sincere curatorial attempt to present
works in disparate media as somehow thematically connected or unified, actually
seeing such connections can just as often be a perceptual stretch for the
viewer.
But in this
particularly tantalizing exhibit, curator Elizabeth Blakemore has clearly
articulated an appreciation of the similar conceptual and thematic elements
that inform the works of the two artists she has paired: painter Jack McWhorter
and ceramic sculptor Beth Lindenberger. As Blakemore observes in the gallery
brochure for the show, both artists share an intense interest in hybridized and
morphed natural or scientific structures as metaphors for seeing the known
world in an expanded way. “Gathering signals, rather than specific objects,”
she writes, “opens up the potential to re-think how they [the artists] see or
know a familiar object in nature and give it another kind of physical
presence.”
The physical look
of Beth Lindenberger’s small clay objects is derived from the natural world of
pods and seeds. Elegant and precise in their workmanship, they have at once all
the authentic presence of laboratory specimens or museum fossils and the subtle
intrigue of things exotic, strange or even alien. But don’t take that
description to imply cold lifelessness.
True to her statement for the show,
Lindenberger’s objects successfully transcend their specific visual references
to “familiar” natural forms by effectively suggesting associations with (and certainly
celebrations of) growth, regeneration,
or mutation. In that sense, they can be viewed either as singularly engrossing
episodes or, collectively, as chapters in a larger continuum of processes
through time – symbols of pure potential in an evolving narrative of change.
That same sense of
transient forms and/or temporal processes is very much alive in the oil
paintings on canvas and paper by Jack McWhorter. On a cognitive level, the
basic substance of his paintings in this exhibit is fairly consistent with the
work presented in his 2010 one-man show at Malone University. For those of you
wanting a helpful reminder, here’s the link to that review: http://artwach.blogspot.com/2010/02/molecularities-and-other-quarknesses.html
. This is not to say there haven’t been some striking developments since then.
Particularly
notable in that way are the newer (2012) paintings on paper. Here, McWhorter’s
lively palette employs relatively more daring combinations of hues further
enhanced by heightened translucency and luminosity. He has become ever more
attuned to the nuanced freedom of gestural mark-making and engaging, painterly
panache that working on paper can so uniquely support. The vivacious brush work
seems to let his configurations – a kind of diagrammatic or even calligraphic
allusion to botanic and other natural phenomena - emerge with fluid playfulness. Call it a lyrical
brio.
Photos: (top –to-bottom)
"Standing
the Cold" and "Shellfish" - oil on paper by Jack McWhorter
/ clay piece by Beth Lindenberger
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