Verdant Visions
By Tom Wachunas
“It is Spring
again. The earth is like a child that knows poems by heart.”
-Rainer Maria
Rilke
EXHIBIT: Verdant Visions at Gallery 6000, on view
THROUGH JUNE 21, located in the University Center Dining Room on the Kent State
University at Stark campus, 6000 Frank Avenue NW, North Canton. ARTISTS RECEPTION is on MONDAY EVENING, MAY
13, 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Please RSVP to Becky DeHart at (330) 244-3518 or rdehart@kent.edu
Lately I’ve been reminded that it’s
possible to over- think and/or over-teach a subject – in my case, the course I
teach at Kent Stark called “Art as a World Phenomenon.” Ooooh, such a serious
(and somewhat unmemorable) name for what was formerly called “Art Survey” -
essentially art appreciation. What, really, was so wrong with the old name of
the course? Who comes up with this stuff anyway? But I digress.
In my passion for
communicating what visual artists do and how they do it, perhaps I give too
much undeserved glory to the philosophical pretensions and contradictions of Postmodernist
art. Such heady attention to contemporary art issues can come at the cost of
downplaying the sheer pleasure that can be had in embracing conventional
Representation and Naturalism on its own terms. Mea culpa.
Recently I read a considerable number of papers
by my students who apparently thought that every
painting of things seen in nature must
necessarily be symbolic in order to be valid or relevant, as in having “meaning”
or an underlying “message” beyond the visual evidence at hand. But it seems to
me that really seeing a masterfully
painted flower, for example, can (or should be) an ennobling, joyous experience
in itself. Encountering “traditional” art need not be a challenge to solve some
presumed mystery.
So for those bent on
finding a message in the current show at Gallery 6000, try this one on for size,
with apologies to Gertrude Stein: sunlight is sunlight, shadow is shadow, a
rock is a rock, a flower is a flower, a cloud a cloud. Get the picture(s)?
The exhibit
features 18 vibrant works by five highly accomplished artists: Diane Belfiglio,
Jim Grand, Irene Tobias Rodriguez, Kris Wyler and Isabel Zaldivar. Their
excellent images in watercolor, oil, acrylic and pastel explore the sumptuous
textures, light, and brilliant colors of spring through floral and landscape
themes.
Stop and smell the
roses? Come to think of it, there’s nary a rose to be found in this spectacular
celebration of the season. Still, the show is resplendent with a sublime aroma,
as it were, of poetry that only Nature can inspire and skilled hands make
palpable.
PHOTOS: (from top)
Azaleas’ Song of Spring by Irene
Tobias Rodriguez; Passion in Pink II by
Diane Belfiglio; North Light – View from
my Studio by Jim Grand
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