Of Tattooed Poodles and Atomic Love
By Tom Wachunas
EXHIBITION: Love Between the Atoms and New Drawings and Ceramics, works in clay
by Eva Kwong and Kirk Mangus, Canton Museum of Art, 1001 Market Avenue North.
SHOW ENDS ON SUNDAY, MARCH 10. www.cantonart.org
This is the second
in a series of shows featuring married couples who are professional clay
artists (the first, Journey in Clay: The
Colemans, presented last spring and reviewed
at http://artwach.blogspot.com/2012/06/marriage-made-in-earth.html
), and I apologize for this late review. But there are still four days left to
see these remarkable ceramic works by Eva Kwong and Kirk Mangus.
In her statement
for this exhibit, Eva Kwong tells us of her fascination with forces of
attraction between protons and electrons, and how those forces determine the
workings of the universe, microscopically and macroscopically. Further, most of
her works here are explorations of intertwined dualities – solids and voids,
mass and air. In short, the attraction of opposites.
There is certainly
a kind of gravitas attached to the idea of energies that bind structures
(spiritual as well as physical) together – the yin and yang of existence. But
Kwong’s interpretations of dualities, whether cosmic or personal, aren’t overly
ponderous or heavy-handed. Instead, they exude an elegant, light-hearted if not
gently awkward gracefulness.
Her vibrantly
colored objects are juxtapositions of tapered, hollow tubular forms that
suggest flared-out stems joined to bulbous spheroids which are decoratively
patterned with dots. Seed pods, or clusters of atomic particles? While these
biomorphic configurations could understandably be seen as whimsical vases waiting
to receive long-stemmed blossoms, they also function quite well on a more
poetic, abstract plane - three-dimensional metaphors for the unifying
tension between filled and unfilled entities.
Kwong’s husband, Kirk Mangus, offers among
other objects an intriguing collection of small seated ceramic poodles and pit bulls.
He cites in his statement Argos, the astonishingly faithful dog immortalized in
Homer’s The Odyssey. Argos waited for
20 years in Ithaca after the fall of Troy for the return of his hero master,
Odysseus. Accordingly, Mangus named his clay sculptures after various
characters from Homer’s epic.
So on one level
these pieces are a collective homage to canine character. But with all of them
being rendered from the same mold, I don’t believe they’re meant to represent all poodles or pit bulls, but rather
specific encounters with individual dogs. Episodic sculptures of a deeply
personal nature.
All of Mangus’s
multi-colored dogs are glazed in a painterly, frenetic sort of graffiti (the
artist likens his illustrative approach to tattooing), much like his ink and
gouache drawings on handmade paper. These meandering figurations have a primal
energy about them, like the automatic writing of the Surrealists. Are they
intended to be viewed as free-associative, flow- of- consciousness gestures
about the artist’s life with beloved pets?
Perhaps it’s just as reasonable to see dogs as
vessels of their own memories and/or longings, and to view these pieces as
indicating the dogs’ “personal” perspectives on living with their masters:
playful, curious, equal parts reliability and unpredictability. And always
completely in the moment.
PHOTOS, from top: Pisea (left side) and Snowflake Vase by Eva Kwong; Argos (upper left) and Proteus by Kirk Mangus; Agamemnon by Kirk Mangus
No comments:
Post a Comment