Bricolage and Brio
By Tom Wachunas
EXHIBITION: About Face, featuring artists Sharon
Dulabaum and Laurie Fife Harbert, at The Little Art Gallery, THROUGH DECEMBER
2. Located in the North Canton Public Library, 185 North Main Street, North
Canton. (330) 499 – 4712, Ext. 312 gallery@northcantonlibrary.org
In the lexicon of
art categorization, the work of Laurie Fife Harbert is a good example of the
“outsider” aesthetic. Formally untrained
in the traditional sense, she has nonetheless unquestioningly surrendered to
the proverbial Muse, as she points out in her statement for this show. She also
lets us know that many of her works embody “inside jokes” or narratives. “The
inspiration for a piece,” she writes, “often known to me and only a few others,
is often subtly alluded to in the titles of my work, like a spy speaking in a
code known only to a select few, secretly offered up in plain sight.” Hmmm.
Sounds suspiciously like the modus operandi of numerous postmodern artists.
Actually, I’m not
sure the allusions in her titles are all that subtle, as their connections to
what we in fact see are often fairly obvious. Cocoa the Kid, for example, like many of her pieces, is an
anthropomorphic rendering of found objects, this one using a Hershey’s Cocoa
can for the abdomen. And Angel Amphora is
just that – a small, graceful jar that looks like an angel ornament you might
see in a curio cabinet. From that perspective, these pieces are all a perfectly
appropriate fit for the Little Art Gallery’s built-in glass display cases.
Harbert’s brand of bricolage (assemblage of
found or collected materials on hand) is elegantly ornamental and well crafted,
even if infused with a sometimes overly-precious domesticity. This is certainly
not to say that her decorations are totally without depth.
Among the more engaging objects, both in title
and content, is Xander has No Father. It’s
also one of Harbert’s smallest pieces and, unfortunately, woefully ill-placed
at the bottom of the case. Still, for those limber enough to hunker down for a
better view, the work exudes a whimsical if not surreal intrigue (not unlike a
few others in this collection) reminiscent of Joseph Cornell’s boxed
assemblages from the mid-twentieth century. Even though Harbert doesn’t
regularly employ Cornell’s shadow box format, his own thoughts on the matter
seem nonetheless relevant to the overall character of Harbert’s work: “Shadow
boxes become poetic theaters or settings wherein are metamorphosed the element
of a childhood pastime.”
The title of this
show - Face to Face - is no doubt largely derived from the paintings
by Sharon Dulabaum. Her collection here of 24 works is a somewhat uneven gathering
of portraits (animal and human) that would have been well-served by some
judicious editing. Dulabaum is a
multi-faceted painter – a polystylist – who has truly mastered some pictorial
formats and languages while seeming to greatly struggle with others.
In some ways it’s
hard to believe that the same artist who gives us the wondrously gorgeous oils,
Beth and Angel (a cat lounging in mesmerizing rays of light), can also offer
such unresolved experiments as her colored pencil and watercolor portraits, Youth, and Young Girl. In works like these two, her passion for visual
textures, saturated, rich color, and layered mark-making is clear. But these elements don’t so much meld seamlessly as they
collide and clutter, making the picture plane a bit too soupy and unfocused.
Such spontaneous, visual affectations are relatively more successful in her
watercolor and pencil portrait, Margarita
Girl.
There’s also a delightful spirit of
spontaneity at work in her uncomplicated oil painting, Snow Buddies – a bird’s-eye-view
of two dogs on long leashes, walking in the snow. Quiet yet lively, like her
best works in this collection, and for that matter like many of Harbert’s
assemblages, it’s a charming and earnest homage to simple pleasures and moments.
PHOTOS: (Top) Margarita Girl by Sharon Dulabaum / Presto the Sad Clown by Laurie Fife
Harbert
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