Transcendent Tendrils
By Tom Wachunas
EXHIBIT: Continuum – Mixed Media Work by Susan
McClelland, Main Hall Art Gallery, Kent State University at Stark, 6000
Frank Avenue NW, North Canton, THROUGH APRIL 10 (Gallery closed during Spring
Break March 25-31). Gallery hours are Monday-Friday 11am to 5pm, Saturday 10am
to Noon
Much of the
discourse surrounding Postmodernist aesthetics and forms embraces art as a
system of symbols – a language – that is intrinsically metaphorical and
elliptical. From this perspective, an artist’s chosen form will often signify a
singular thing while exemplifying (either intentionally or not) a multiplicity
of things.
Interpreting the object at hand then
necessarily becomes a matter of identifying or sorting out what experiences
and/or predispositions we as viewers bring to the encounter - to fill in the
blanks, so to speak, between the signified and the exemplified. As the years
march on, I’ve found this approach to understanding the complicated ethos of
Postmodernism to be increasingly useful, and particularly helpful on the
occasion of seeing the fascinating work of Susan McClelland, adjunct faculty (sculpture)
at Kent Stark.
Five small,
mixed-media wall pieces, under the collective title, Series of Strategies, have all the appearance of dissected spinal
vertebrae. But these organic forms aren’t objective illustrations of medical
specimens. They’re invitingly tactile, meticulously stitched together and
colored, and exude a distinctly lyrical quality. Backbones with character. You
might view them as allegories of evolving personhood.
McClelland’s other
sculptures here are evocative of vine-like stems and tendrils. Their highly
textured, multi-colored surfaces give them a bold and magical sort of presence –
not unlike encountering strange growths in a fantasy forest.
Three of the works are collaborative projects
with three students – Jen Jones, Cory Wilson, and Joshua Humm. McClelland
presented each student with one of her spindly configurations and the student “responded”
by merging it with painted styrofoam forms, manipulated to suggest, perhaps,
stratified rock formations or primitive architecture. I think these chimerical
convergences are largely successful on the part of the students in consistently
sustaining the spirit of McClelland’s working process.
It is a process
which is - as manifest by the show’s most compelling and ambitious piece, a
large-scale installation called Speciation
- certainly ephemeral and intuitive. On the surface, this spectacular work
is a gnarled tangle of long, thin, intersecting sticks (at times looking like
bones) that have been encased in waxy color and ciliated fiber.
I think of the
work’s linearity as spatial writing – a three-dimensional documentary, or diary
if you will, about the continuity of decisions involved in its construction.
There is a sense of fending off structural collapse, as indicated by the
inclusion of black metal braces joining various segments together. This tension
between the industrial and the organic is itself an engaging metaphor for the
ontological concerns that can vex us all.
The simultaneity of decay and repair, damage
and mending, or disease and healing is a sensibility resonant throughout this
show. The colorful knotting together of disparate directions (decisions)
apparent in Speciation does seem to
indicate a subtle optimism amid potential chaos, as if to say when all else
fails, go with the flow. A tentative if not harmonious resolution.
PHOTOS (from top):
from Series of Strategies; Organic
Syncopation (collaboration with Joshua Humm); Speciation (detail)
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