Tripping the Paint Fantastic
By Tom Wachunas
“I can believe
anything, provided that it is quite incredible.” - Oscar Wilde –
“Any sufficiently
advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.” -Arthur C. Clarke-
EXHIBITION: Warriors of the Fantastic: Illustrations by
Chris Seaman, at the Canton Museum of Art (CMA), THROUGH OCTOBER 28, 1001
Market Avenue North, Canton, Ohio (330) 453 – 7666 www.cantonart.org
Every time I
encounter art of the sort seen here, I flash back to few fellow art students
from my college days of the early 1970s. Their paintings looked very much like
the cover art of our favorite science fiction novels, sometimes like
Hieronymous Bosch-inspired visions or yes, sometimes like acid-induced
hallucinations. This often incurred negative critiques from some of our more
high-brow painting instructors, such as, “That’s not painting, that’s
commercial illustration.” Get with the program. Harrrumph.
Back then, it was
not uncommon in ‘serious’ art and academic circles to marginalize fantasy art
as the lightweight purview of science fiction buffs, comic book illustrators or
rock –n- roll poster designers. The fantasy aesthetic was considered simply too
eccentric, silly and/or irrelevant when compared to that of the celebrated,
more ‘intellectually engaging’ modernist painters of the day.
But what goes
around comes around. These days, thanks to mind-boggling advances in digital
animation technology in the film and computer gaming industries, fantasy art
content – everything from dragons, wizards, and demons to monstrous aliens and
interstellar or ‘secondary’ worlds at war – has become firmly entrenched in pop
culture.
Chris Seaman, who graduated
from the Columbus College of Art and Design in 2000, started his career as an
illustrator for the Harry Potter Collectible Card Game and has since become a
successful full-time author and illustrator with a prestigious client roster.
For more background and viewing a spectacular array of his paintings, I highly
recommend a visit to his web site at www.chrisseamanart.com . But nothing
compares to seeing them up close and personal at his CMA exhibit.
If I have one
complaint about the show, it’s a relatively minor one: there’s arguably too
much of an intriguing thing overcrowding the walls. Maybe, though, that’s the
intent – to overwhelm us with dizzying
encounters of the bizarre kind. Most of the 42 paintings (executed in either
acrylic or oil on board) are so decoratively and elaborately framed that they
suggest perhaps a new name for the genre – Baroque Surrealism.
I’ve often
wondered about the ever- burgeoning popularity of ‘fantasy’ art. What prompts
human imaginations to concoct and savor such wildly extreme scenarios as seen
in today’s movie epics, television dramas, Internet role-playing games, and for
that matter the otherworldly paintings we see here? Is it simply fantasy ‘entertainment’?
Escapism? Really? Escape from what? Could it be that we’re simply displacing or
sublimating our fears and anxieties? Are we merely disguising the horrors of
real-world living by creating exotic new names and costumes for the evils that
have always beleaguered us?
From that
perspective, Seaman is an unflinching Realist. His exactitude with brush, his
compositional prowess, and his ability as an expressive colorist are all quite
astonishing. While the exhibit contains a considerable number of meticulously
painted character portraits, most impressive are his panoramic scenes of explosive
conflict.
More interesting still, their scale. Call it
counterintuitive. You’d think that visual narratives this action-packed would
require sufficiently large surfaces to effectively communicate their intense
drama. But these paintings are surprisingly tight and small - diminutive albeit
gripping snapshots of apocalyptic doings. Like lightning in a bottle.
Photos (top to
bottom): Lich King; Last Legion of
Battle; Thar’s Revenge
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