Curious Cartography
By Tom Wachunas
“Maps codify the
miracle of existence.” – Nicholas Crane, from Mercator: The Man Who Mapped The Planet” -
EXHIBITION: Terra Imaginara: Mapping the Fantastic, recent
work by Scott Alan Evans, Studio M at The Massillon Museum, 121 Lincoln Way
East, downtown Massillon, THROUGH MARCH 10
(330) 833 – 4061 www.massillonmuseum.org
Déjà vu all over
again. For a moment, this solo exhibit by Mogadore artist Scott Alan Evans took
me back to my 1968 high school days and a live book report I presented to my
English Literature class. At the time, none of my classmates had heard of
J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Hobbit. The 1937
novel was the subject of my report, and a book that ignited my life-long love
affair with fantasy literature.
I presented my
report dressed in a borrowed royal blue graduation gown along with a wizard’s
hat fashioned from gold-colored poster board rolled into a cone and inscribed
with runes copied from one of Tolkien’s illustrations. The piece de resistance of my report included using what was normally
the classroom’s roll-down map of the world, but in this case revealing my very
large watercolor copy of Tolkien’s map of Middle Earth, secretly attached before
class time. My special effects netted me an ‘A’ and, come to think of it, I
view the whole experience as my first foray into performance art. But I
digress.
One of Evans’
digital works here is a faithful replication of a map from The Hobbit, with some spiffy silver leaf enhancements, and accompanied by the artist’s written
homage to Tolkien’s inspiring influence on this body of work.
In media and
content – visual and ideological - this is indeed an eclectic collection of 16
pieces that “map” places somewhere between the faintly familiar and the purely
strange. Some are so simplistic and raw that you’d think this was an exhibit of
children’s projects. Others are decidedly more refined – even playfully slick –
such as the digital works Moon and Cloud Atlas. They have the “official”
patina of legitimate, scientific documents of extraterrestrial territories and
phenomena.
On the surface,
while most of the compositions here denote physical locales, I think a strong
case can be made for viewing the show as a collective cartography of processed
ideas. These are works perhaps more conceptual in nature than purely
image-driven. And from the perspective of technically accomplished pictures per
se, the show is an uneven mix of hits and misses.
I agree with the
assessment offered by my colleague in critique, Judi Krew (whose observations I’ve
greatly missed lately), in her blog entry from February 1 at www.snarkyart.blogspot.com Evans’
most visually compelling works include the mixed media The Great Bear – a marvelously tactile work that harkens to
prehistoric rituals of defining the observed cosmos – and the acrylic painting The Painted Isle.
The latter is
composed of organically-shaped splotches of heavily accumulated paint adhered
to an all-white ground, itself thick with brush strokes. Still, it’s a visual
idea that I think begged for more subtlety and development, as in letting the
image become a kind of map of painterly process. If it can be said that ideas
can actually tell an artist how they “want” to be presented, maybe the collaged
islands in this painting, rather than simply sitting on top of, want to appear as emerging from and/or disappearing into
the white ground.
That said, Judi
Krew’s take on the piece is nonetheless appropriately poetic when she writes, “…these
layers of paint are like civilizations that have occupied the same lands over
centuries and left their marks, their monuments and their memories and upon
which we keep building, living, and dying.”
Déjà vu all over
again. Thanks, Judi. Write on.
PHOTOS (from top):
Archipelago, The Painted Isle, The Great
Bear
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